
Italian police outside the Omani embassy in Rome where the nuclear talks took place. (Credit: Andreas Solaro/AFP)
DUBAI — Iranian and U.S. negotiators wrapped up a fifth round of talks on Friday, with mediator Oman saying there was some limited progress in negotiations aimed at resolving a decades-long dispute over Tehran's nuclear ambitions.
The sides will meet again, though the date and venue still have to be decided, a source close to the Iranian team told Reuters. There was no immediate comment from the U.S. delegation at Friday's session in Rome.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqhchi said there was potential for progress in the negotiations after Oman made several proposals, but the talks were complicated and more discussions were needed. "We've just completed one of the most professional rounds of negotiations," Araqhchi told Iranian state TV.
The stakes are high for both sides. President Donald Trump wants to curtail Tehran's potential to produce a nuclear weapon that could trigger a regional nuclear arms race and perhaps threaten Israel. The Islamic Republic, for its part, wants to be rid of devastating sanctions on its oil-based economy.
Omani Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi, whose country is mediating the negotiations, said on X the fifth round of talks had ended "with some but not conclusive progress."
"We hope to clarify the remaining issues in the coming days, to allow us to proceed towards the common goal of reaching a sustainable and honorable agreement," he said.
Araqhchi and Trump's Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff led the fifth round of talks through the Omani mediators, Iranian media reported.
Both Washington and Tehran have taken a tough stance in public over Iran's intensifying uranium enrichment program, which could potentially give it scope to build a nuclear weapon, though Tehran says it has no such ambitions and the purposes are purely civilian.
Ahead of the talks, Araqhchi wrote on X: "Zero nuclear weapons = we Do have a deal. Zero enrichment = we do NOT have a deal. Time to decide."
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt had told reporters on Thursday that Trump believes negotiations with Iran are "moving in the right direction."
Stumbling blocks
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Tuesday that Washington was working to reach an accord that would allow Iran to have a civil nuclear energy program but not enrich uranium, while acknowledging that this "will not be easy."
Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the last say on matters of state, rejected demands to stop refining uranium as "excessive and outrageous," warning that such talks were unlikely to yield results.
Among remaining stumbling blocks are Tehran's refusal to ship abroad its entire stockpile of highly enriched uranium — possible raw material for nuclear bombs — or engage in discussions over its ballistic missile program, which could carry warheads over long distances.
Iran says it is ready to accept some limits on enrichment, but needs watertight guarantees that Washington would not renege on a future nuclear accord.
Trump in his first term in 2018 ditched a 2015 nuclear pact between major powers and Iran. Since returning to office this year, he has restored a "maximum pressure" campaign on Tehran and reimposed sweeping U.S. sanctions that continue to hobble the Iranian economy.
Iran responded by escalating enrichment far beyond the 2015 pact's limits.
Wendy Sherman, a former U.S. undersecretary who led the U.S. negotiating team that reached the 2015 agreement, earlier said that Tehran presents enrichment as a matter of sovereignty.
"I don't think it is possible to get a deal with Iran where they literally dismantle their program, give up their enrichment, even though that would be ideal," she told Reuters.
The cost of failure of the talks could be high. Iran's arch-foe Israel sees Iran's nuclear program as an existential threat and says it would never allow the clerical establishment to obtain nuclear weapons.
Israel's strategic affairs minister and the head of its foreign intelligence service, Mossad, were also due to be in Rome for talks with the U.S. negotiators, a source aware of the matter told Reuters.
Araqhchi said on Thursday that Washington would bear legal responsibility if Israel attacked Iranian nuclear installations, following a CNN report that Israel might be preparing strikes.
Reporting by Parisa Hafezi in Dubai and John Irish in Paris; writing by Parisa Hafezi; editing by Alexandra Hudson, Mark Heinrich, Kevin Liffey and Andrew Heavens
wrapped up a fifth round of talks on Friday, with mediator Oman
saying there was some limited progress in negotiations aimed at
resolving a decades-long dispute over Tehran's nuclear
ambitions.
The sides will meet again, though the date and venue still
have to be decided, a source close to the Iranian team told
Reuters. There was no immediate comment from the U.S. delegation
at Friday's session in Rome.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqhchi said there was
potential for progress in the negotiations after Oman made
several proposals, but the talks were complicated and more
discussions were needed. "We've just completed one of the most professional
rounds of negotiations," Araqhchi told Iranian state TV.
The stakes are high for both sides....