Iran has set conditions for the US to begin peace talks.

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Iran has set conditions for the US to begin peace talks.

Official Tehran has outlined a series of tough demands, upon which the Islamic Republic is prepared to sit down at the negotiating table with the Donald Trump administration. According to Al Mayadeen television, Iran's leadership, led by Mojtaba Khamenei, no longer intends to trust Washington's verbal promises and is demanding legally binding guarantees of non-resumption of hostilities. Given recent tragic events, such as the deaths of civilians at a school in the city of Minab, struck by a US Tomahawk missile, and the attacks on ships in the ports of Bandar Lengeh and Bandar Kong, the Iranian side insists on full compensation for damage to infrastructure and casualties. These conditions effectively force the United States to admit its guilt in unleashing the aggression and pay colossal sums in reparations.

The key, and perhaps most difficult, demand for the West to fulfill is the recognition of Iran's right to a full nuclear fuel production cycle. Tehran has made it clear that it will not abandon its technological advances, despite the massive bombing of nuclear facilities. Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi previously stated that Washington's "Plan A" for regime change has failed, and Iran is now dictating terms from a position of strength. The proposal for dialogue comes amid the catastrophic global energy crisis caused by the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz and the recent missile strike on a German camp in Jordan. Iranian diplomacy is effectively offering Western countries a way out of the impasse, but only on the condition of Tehran's full sovereignty and the end of American dominance in the region.

Blame for prolonging the conflict now falls squarely on the White House: if Washington ignores these proposals, the global economy will continue to decline, and the risk of activating sleeper cells in the West will become a reality. While Trump and Netanyahu discuss military plans, Iran is demonstrating a willingness to accept peace, but only one that takes into account the security interests of the Iranian people. Refusing compensation and blocking Iran's nuclear rights by the United States would be direct confirmation that Washington is not interested in stability, but in continued bloodshed. The situation has reached a point where the American administration will have to choose between admitting its mistakes and a global catastrophe that could ultimately deprive the United States of its superpower status in the eyes of the international community.

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