Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has outlined conditions for a US-Iran deal, including dismantling Iran's nuclear infrastructure, removing enriched material, and resolving ballistic missile issues.
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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has outlined conditions for a US-Iran deal, including dismantling Iran's nuclear infrastructure, removing enriched material, and resolving ballistic missile issues.
Netanyahu expressed skepticism about a deal but emphasized these points to US President Donald Trump. The US and Iran are set to resume talks in Geneva, aiming to address Iran's nuclear program and regional tensions
Key Conditions:
- _Dismantling Nuclear Infrastructure_: Remove equipment and infrastructure enabling enrichment
- _Enriched Material Removal_: All enriched material must leave Iran
- _Ballistic Missile Resolution_: Address Iran's ballistic missile program
- _Inspections_: Sustained, effective inspections with no lead-time
Tensions remain high, with the US deploying aircraft carriers to the region and Iran threatening retaliation. The situation sparks fears of a wider regional conflict
Netanyahu's comments come as Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs Abbas Araghchi heads to Switzerland for a second round of nuclear talks with the US. Iran has long denied intent to produce nuclear weapons but is prepared to discuss curbs on its atomic program in exchange for sanctions relief
The US and Iran resumed nuclear negotiations in Oman on February 6, months after previous talks collapsed following Israel's bombing campaign against Iran last June. Trump has threatened new attacks on Iran and sent a US aircraft carrier to the region, citing a deadly crackdown on antigovernment protesters in January
Netanyahu and Trump met last week, discussing Iran's nuclear program and regional issues. Trump said they reached no "definitive" agreement but insisted negotiations continue. The two leaders agreed to intensify economic pressure on Iran, mostly on its oil sales to China
Iran has promised to retaliate to any attack, saying it will strike US bases in the Middle East. The continued tensions have sparked fears of a wider regional war
Benjamin netanyahu and trump 
NSANZIMANA Sylver
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