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Iran-US talks in Oman updates: Discussions to continue next week – Tehran

These were the updates on the Iran-US discussions held in Oman’s capital, Muscat, on Saturday April 12, 2025.

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi speaks with the members of the Iranian delegation after the negotiation in Muscat
Video Duration 02 minutes 39 seconds play-arrow02:39

US-Iran nuclear talks: Delegations in Oman for negotiations

By Virginia Pietromarchi
Published On 12 Apr 202512 Apr 2025

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  • Iran says “constructive” talks with the United States in Oman’s capital have ended, adds the two sides have agreed to hold more discussions next week.
  • Oman says the talks in Muscat were held in a “friendly atmosphere conducive to bridging viewpoints”.
  • Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi led the Iranian delegation while Special Envoy Steve Witkoff headed the US team.
  • The two officials spoke for a few minutes in the presence of the Omani foreign minister after the conclusion of the “indirect” talks on the nuclear issue and the lifting of sanctions, the Iranian Foreign Ministry says.
  • US President Donald Trump has threatened military action if a deal isn’t reached. Iran says it’s not seeking nuclear weapons and wants sanctions lifted.
  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 16:28
     (16:28 GMT)

    That’s a wrap from us

    Thank you for joining our live coverage of the Iran-US talks in Oman.

    You can read our up-to-date news story here.

  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 16:15
     (16:15 GMT)

    Here’s what happened today

    We’ll be closing this live page soon, so let’s bring you up to speed with today’s main developments:

    • Indirect talks between Iranian and US delegations in Oman have wrapped up, with Iran’s Foreign Ministry calling the discussions “constructive”.
    • The negotiations lasted for about two and half hours, and both sides have agreed that talks will continue next week, it added.
    • The ministry also said the heads of both negotiating teams spoke briefly face-to-face after the conclusion of the talks.
    • Oman said it mediated to begin a process of “negotiations with the shared aim of concluding a fair and binding agreement”.
  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 16:05
     (16:05 GMT)

    More from Araghchi

    Speaking to state television, the Iranian foreign minister said that “about four rounds of exchanges of messages” between the two delegations took place.

    “I think this first session was constructive. It was held in a calm and very respectful environment, and no inappropriate language was used. Both sides showed their commitment to advancing the talks towards reaching a desirable agreement,” Abbas Araghchi said.

    He expressed hope that in the second round of talks, likely to take place next Saturday, the two sides will “enter discussions on the general frameworks that a potential agreement could include”.

    Araghchi said the US delegation “made significant efforts today to show their will to reach a fair and appropriate agreement. We will evaluate this round of talks at various levels and prepare ourselves for the next round.”

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  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 15:58
     (15:58 GMT)

    Iran’s foreign minister says next round of talks likely on April 19

    We have some comments by Abbas Araghchi following the conclusion of the talks in Muscat.

    In comments made to state television, the Iranian foreign minister said the second round of talks with will “probably take place” a week from now.

    Araghchi noted the location of talks may not be in Oman, but added they will still take place under Omani intermediation.

    “None of the parties are looking for fruitless talks, for talks that are time-wasting,” Araghchi said.

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi attends a meeting with Qatari Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, in Tehran, Iran, Monday, Aug. 26, 2024. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)
    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi [File: Vahid Salemi/AP Photo]
  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 15:45
     (15:45 GMT)
    Analysis

    What is the US’s endgame?

    Ellie Geranmayeh, deputy director of the Middle East and North Africa programme at the European Council on Foreign Relations, says the US’s aims in negotiations with Iran remain ambiguous.

    “I think from the Iranian side, it’s more clear what they will and will not negotiate over and the context of that,” Geranmayeh told Al Jazeera earlier this month.

    “What is the bottom line for the United States?” she asked.

    “It’s really unclear whether President Trump, for example, will accept that Iran enriches uranium on Iranian territory, or if he wants the so-called ‘Libya model’, which is dismantling all of Iran’s nuclear facilities, which will be a no-go for Iran.

    “So these critical endgame issues have to be hashed out, and probably history shows between Iran and the US, this is better done through quiet diplomacy that is facilitated by a third party”.

  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 15:30
     (15:30 GMT)
    Analysis

    Previous nuclear deal blueprint may expedite new negotiations

    Iran and the US are both interested in a swift deal – and this could be reached faster than expected thanks to the existing outline of the previous nuclear agreement signed in 2015, according to Hassan Ahmadian, assistant professor of political sciences at the University of Tehran.

    “Both parties are under some sort of time pressure, the Iranians want to see their sanctions lifted; the Americans want to see a cap on the Iranian nuclear programme, and they both want it faster, rather than later,” Ahmadian told Al Jazeera.

    “The difference between now and the previous negotiations that took years is that we have that blueprint, we have that experience – the main issues have been solved once before, and you can build on that,” he said. “That’s why it can move faster.”

    Still, Ahmadian urged caution in assuming that an agreement could be reached in weeks or even months.

  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 15:15
     (15:15 GMT)
    Explainer

    Iran and US hold talks in Oman: What to know

    • First thing to know – the discussions in Muscat are over.
    • Announcing the of conclusion of the “indirect” talks, Iran’s Foreign Ministry said the discussions were conducted “in a constructive atmosphere and based on mutual respect”.
    • Araghchi and Witkoff exchanged the positions of their respective governments on issues related to Iran’s nuclear programme and the lifting of sanctions on Iran, the ministry said.
    • The two sides agreed to continue negotiations next week, it said.
    • The negotiations took place in separate rooms, with Omani officials relaying messages between the delegations.
    • Araghchi and Witkoff also spoke for a few minutes in the presence of the Omani foreign minister after the conclusion of the talks, the ministry also said.
    • Badr Albusaidi, Oman’s foreign minister, thanked the Iranian and US officials for engaging in a “process of dialogue” aimed at concluding a “fair agreement”.
    • Albusaidi also stressed the exchanges took place in a “friendly atmosphere”.
    • There hasn’t been any comment yet from the US side following the conclusion of the talks.
  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 15:00
     (15:00 GMT)

    Photos: Iranian newspapers today

    A picture shows newspaper front page headlines at a kiosk in Tehran on April 12, 2025, featuring the Iran-US talks on the Iranian nuclear programme set to begin in Oman on the same day.
    The Iran-US talks have dominated headlines in Iranian news publications today [Atta Kenare/AFP]
    An Iranian man reads a newspaper on a Tehran street on April 12, 2025, with the front page featuring the Iran-US talks on the Iranian nuclear programme set to begin in Oman on the same day. Iran's top diplomat arrived in Oman on April 12 and began laying the groundwork for high-stakes nuclear talks with the United States that are unfolding under the threat of military action
    A man in Tehran reads a newspaper [Atta Kenare/AFP]
  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 14:51
     (14:51 GMT)
    Developing

    Oman says Iran-US talks held in a ‘friendly atmosphere’

    Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi has thanked the Iranian and US officials for engaging in a “process of dialogue” aimed at concluding a “fair agreement”.

    In a post on X, the minister said the exchanges took place in a “friendly atmosphere conducive to bridging viewpoints and ultimately achieving regional and global peace, security and stability”.

    He added, “We will continue to work together and put further efforts to assist in arriving at this goal.”

    I am proud to announce that today in Muscat we hosted Iranian Foreign Minister Dr. Seyed Abbas Araghchi and US Presidential Envoy Steve Witkoff and mediated to begin a process of dialogue and negotiations with the shared aim of concluding a fair and binding agreement. I would…

    — Badr Albusaidi – بدر البوسعيدي (@badralbusaidi) April 12, 2025

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  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 14:38
     (14:38 GMT)

    No comment yet from US side

    There hasn’t been any comment yet from the US side on the conclusion of the talks in Oman.

    As we’ve reported, the Iranian Foreign Ministry said the indirect discussions lasted about two and a half hours. After that, Araghchi and Witkoff “briefly spoke in the presence of the Omani Foreign Minister”, it added.

  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 14:30
     (14:30 GMT)

    Trump made upbeat comments – but will he stick to them?

    By Heidi Zhou-Castro

    Reporting from Washington, DC

    The US president struck a rather upbeat, deal-making mode in comments to reporters yesterday saying he wants Iran to flourish but that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. Trump also said that he’d use his own instinct to determine when to end these talks.

    Of course the challenge before Trump is that he was the one who unilaterally took the US out of the previous nuclear deal with Iran and now wants to negotiate a new deal.

    Previously he’d said he wanted more concessions from Iran so that he can then go back to the American voter to say that he got a better deal than his predecessor, Barack Obama, had achieved.

    So the US has been looking for concessions from Iran in the form of more limits to its missile programme, as well as limits on how it’s funding its proxies.

    But really, whether or not Trump will stick with this sort of upbeat mode remains to be seen because depending on the day, he has gone back and forth in public statements between wanting to strike a deal with Iran or even advocating for US military strikes against Iran.

    The US has had a military build-up in the region, sending two aircraft carriers within range. There are stealth bombers there, too.

    We also know that there are tensions even among his advisers, with some pulling for a more forceful military response to Iran – of course, he’s being pitched by Israel to do that, as well. And there’s also Trump’s urge to make a deal and be the peacemaking president that he so much wants his voters to believe him to be.

    US President Donald Trump speaks, as he signs executive orders and proclamations in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 9, 2025.
    US President Donald Trump [File: Nathan Howard/Reuters]
  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 14:19
     (14:19 GMT)
    Developing

    Iran-US talks end

    Iran’s Foreign Ministry has issued a statement saying the talks with the US on the nuclear issue and the lifting of sanctions have concluded.

    It said the discussions in Muscat were conducted “in a constructive atmosphere and based on mutual respect”.

    “The two sides agreed that the talks will continue next week,” it added.

    The ministry also said that after more than two and a half hours of indirect talks, Araghchi and Witkoff “spoke for several minutes in the presence of the Omani Foreign Minister while leaving the negotiations venue”.

  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 14:15
     (14:15 GMT)

    Iran’s focus on economic incentives before US talks

    A potential agreement with the US to lift at least some of its harsh sanctions would bring economic opportunities for Iran.

    But knowing Trump – and his envoy Steve Witkoff – are businessmen who like investment opportunities, senior Iranian officials have also been signalling unprecedented openness on that front before the talks.

    In stunning remarks on Wednesday, President Masoud Pezeshkian said Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is not opposed to US entities investing in the Iranian economy.

    Instead, he said Tehran is only concerned about spies infiltrating the country in the guise of investors.

    “Iran is not the place for a group of individuals to come and conspire to destroy the country, to collect information and then assassinate the people about whom they have collected information,” he said.

    Days earlier, Ali Larijani, a senior adviser to the supreme leader, described Trump as a “talented person who has become so rich in his business”.

    “America can define economic interests with Iran,” he said in comments aired on national television.

  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 14:06
     (14:06 GMT)
    Developing

    Talks’ atmosphere ‘positive’, unlikely to extend to tomorrow

    A member of Iran’s negotiating team has told the Iranian Tasnim news agency that the atmosphere of the indirect talks between Iran and the US has been positive.

    The source added that it’s “unlikely that the negotiations will be extended into tomorrow”.

  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 14:00
     (14:00 GMT)

    How crippling US sanctions hurt Iranians

    By Maziar Motamedi

    Reporting from Tehran, Iran

    The endless waves of US sanctions imposed since Trump left the nuclear deal in May 2018 have battered the Iranian economy and made Iranians considerably poorer.

    Inflation has persistently stood at more than 30 percent – and at intervals above 60 percent – in the past few years, with the national currency constantly freefalling.

    Each US dollar fetched less than 40,000 rials before Trump torpedoed the deal, but that rate stands at about 1 million rials per greenback at the moment.

    All sectors of the Iranian economy are affected by the sanctions, as Iran has been cut off from the international payment system and the US secondary sanctions threaten any person or entity choosing to engage with Iran.

    Even imports of medicine and medical equipment have not been spared. The US only intensified its sanctions as Iran experienced the deadliest COVID-19 pandemic of the Middle East.

    Iranians are banned from most international services, including software and cloud platforms, web services such as education and online learning businesses, freelance work services, and even gaming platforms.

  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 13:45
     (13:45 GMT)

    Iran urges negotiations ‘without theatrics’

    Government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani has said Iran’s willingness to sit at the negotiating table “means precise dialogue, without ruckus”.

    “Every message, first written and clear; without theatrics, without anything on the sidelines,” she said on X.

    This should put an end to the “unsubstantiated” narrative pushed forward by those who oppose the negotiations, Mohajerani said, adding that Iran has chosen today the path for “diplomatic rationality”.

    Iran's government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani
    Iran’s government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani [File: Atta Kenare/AFP]
  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 13:30
     (13:30 GMT)
    Analysis

    Iran faces mounting crises as negotiations take centre stage

    Successful negotiations with the US and the lifting of sanctions would be an important step for Iran at a time it faces multiple, simultaneous crises, according to Ali Vaez, Iran project director at the International Crisis Group.

    On the domestic front, he said the “serious economic issues” and “degree of discontent” mean that this is “a particularly dangerous moment” for the government, noting that the local currency has lost half of its value since President Masoud Pezeshkian assumed office less than a year ago.

    “They are literally struggling to keep the lights on,” Vaez told Al Jazeera.

    On the regional level, Vaez said the country has also been weakened following Israel’s offensive against Hezbollah in Lebanon and the fall of Iran’s longtime ally Bashar al-Assad in Syria.

    “And then the nuclear issue will come to a head this year,” he added, warning that “unless there’s some kind of a deal, the Europeans are going to snap back” UN sanctions.

    Should that happen, Iran has threatened to withdraw from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, an agreement that prohibits the spread of nuclear weapons.

    “Now we can imagine an advanced nuclear programme with no international monitoring; [it] certainly crosses an Israeli and an American red line, which would result in military action against Iran, just in the next few months,” Vaez said.

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  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 13:15
     (13:15 GMT)
    Developing

    Iran not expecting ‘long’ discussions

    We have some more comments from the spokesman of Iran’s Foreign Ministry.

    In comments broadcast on state television, Esmaeil Baghaei described the Iran-US negotiations as “just a beginning” and said Tehran did not “expect this round of talks to be very long”.

  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 13:00
     (13:00 GMT)

    Iran’s supreme leader ‘gave Araghchi full authority’ for Oman talks

    Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s adviser Ali Shamkhani has said Tehran is “seeking a real and fair agreement”, adding that “important and implementable proposals are ready.

    “If Washington comes to the talks with sincere intentions and genuine will to reach an agreement, the path to a deal will be clear and smooth,” Shamkhani added.

    Meanwhile, an Iranian official quoted by Reuters said Khamenei, who has the final say on all key Iranian policies, has given Araghchi “full authority” for the talks in Oman.

    “The duration of the talks, which will only be about the nuclear issue, will depend on the US side’s seriousness and goodwill,” said the official, who asked not to be named.

    Iran has ruled out negotiating its defence capabilities such as its ballistic missile programme.

    Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei speaks during a meeting in Tehran [Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader/WANA/Reuters]
    Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei [File: Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader/WANA/Reuters]
  • live-orange
    12 Apr 2025 - 12:45
     (12:45 GMT)

    Both sides have been asked to produce position paper: Source

    By James Bays

    There’s not a lot of information and visibility on what is going on behind closed doors in Muscat.

    But Al Jazeera has learned from a source close to the negotiations that both sides were asked to produce a position paper, laying out the areas they think are important for the discussion and their red lines – the things that cannot be discussed and must not be crossed.

    Those two papers will then be swapped, so they’ll each get to see the other side’s key position on this.

    The Iranian side has said these talks must be limited to the nuclear issue.

    The other thing that we understand relates to the issue of whether these talks will be direct or indirect, with the Omanis going from room to room and speaking with either side.

    Our understanding from the source is that the Iranian side does not have instructions from Tehran to have direct meetings.

    This is a similar situation to when in 2015 then-Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif would take instructions from Tehran where many people, notably the supreme leader, needed to keep an eye on exactly what was going on in these talks, as they did previously in Geneva and Vienna.

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