Washington’s special presidential envoy, Steve Witkoff, insisted on Tuesday that they will “stop and eliminate its enrichment and weapon weapon program,” after suggestion, Tehran could keep civil degree facilities on any revised night.
Witkoff, who had indirect conversations with Iranian leaders in Oman on Saturday, said in a statement any possible Iran agreement “will only be completed if it is a Trump agreement,” backward in comments to Sean Hannity of Fox News on Monday night that Iran could maintain its civil use of uranium enrichment sites.
“Any final arrangement must establish a framework for peace, stability and prosperity in the Middle East, which means that Iran must stop and eliminate its nuclear enrichment and armament program,” said the one sent on Tuesday.
“It is imperative for the world that we believe a difficult and fair treatment that will last, and that is what President Trump has asked me to do.”
The night before, Witkoff had told Hannity that any agreement would have to include “verification” or nuclear sites to ensure that the operational facilities were not turning weapons material.
“The conversation with the Iranians is about two critical points: one, enrichment, as you mentioned: they do not need to enrich more than 3.67%,” he said. “In some circumstances, they are 60%. In other circumstances, 20%.
“That cannot be and does not need to execute, as they affirm, a ‘civil nuclear program’ in which it is enriching it conforms to 3.67%, so it will be a lot of verification in the enrichment program.”
Witkoff also said that the “verification” would be replicare to ensure that Iran was not assembling its nuclear program.
“That includes missiles, the type of missiles that have stored there, and includes the trigger for a bomb,” he told Hannity. “And I think we are here to have, as the president said, and I take my direction from him every day that I am going to work, we are here to see that we can solve this diplomatic situation and with dialogue.”
The Witkoff plan from El Benyo, which keeps Iran to maintain some nuclear capabilities, as long as they open the strict inspections, was the Iran nuclear agreement of Iran of 2015, of President Barack Obama, which Trump retired to the United States in 2018.
The state department spokeswoman, Tammy Bruce, tried to explain the confusion a press conference on Tuesday, noting that Witkoff “speaks for himself quite well”, but that is what comes out through the official channels.
“The Witkoff ambassador, clearly, is one of the best people in the world to negotiate and deal with bad actors and obtain peace and cease the cessation,” he said. “But when things are said at the time of the public, you should consider that they are not, that is not part of how they negotiate, in the sense of what they are talking about together, and that should expect and see that he is …” ”
“What matters is a final result,” Bruce added, “all parties agree, the documents are signed. It is not what people say but the actions they take.”
The spokesman also read Witkoff’s statement, making it clear that this was the official Trump administration policy. “
“What matters is what is achieved … and if someone can do that, it would be a president Trump and his vision, along with the ambassador Witkoff, who is a great job in this regard.”