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Three rounds of negotiations failed before military action on Iran, say US officials

For weeks, American diplomats sat across the table with officials from Iran and tried to reach a deal. They travelled to Oman and went to Switzerland. They offered incentives, laid out red lines, and kept coming back. In the end, they concluded it was all a waste of time and reported their findings to President Donald Trump.

ANI Mar 04, 2026 03:16 IST googleads

Representative Image (Photo/Reuters)

Washington DC [US], March 4 (ANI): Senior US administration officials have claimed that after three rounds of negotiations with Iran over its nuclear programme collapsed, Washington concluded that Tehran was “never serious about giving up its enrichment ambitions,” and launched Operation Epic Fury within days of the final meeting.

For weeks, American diplomats sat across the table with officials from Iran and tried to reach a deal. They travelled to Oman and went to Switzerland. They offered incentives, laid out red lines, and kept coming back. In the end, they concluded it was all a waste of time and reported their findings to President Donald Trump.

Briefing reporters, including ANI, on Tuesday (local time) about the background of the US-led attack on Iran, senior US officials walked reporters through exactly what happened during those three rounds of talks and explained why they believe Iran was never serious about giving up its nuclear programme.

Officials described a pattern of delay, threats, and “false pretences” on the Iranian side during talks held in Oman and Switzerland.

According to US officials, the first round began with what they termed a “threat dressed as a negotiation.” Iran’s lead negotiator, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Iran, Abbas Araghchi, opened by asserting that uranium enrichment was his country’s “inalienable right.”

He also stated that Iran’s stockpile of uranium enriched to 60 per cent — approximately 460 kilograms — was enough material for eleven nuclear bombs, and warned that the United States would have to “pay dearly” to retrieve it.

At one point, Araghchi remarked that Iran would “never allow America to achieve through diplomacy what it couldn’t achieve militarily,” though he later sought to retract the comment. “That was a pretty strong statement about where they felt this negotiation was going,” one US official said.

Before the second round, Washington asked Tehran to submit a written draft proposal within five to six days. Iran agreed, but no document arrived, the US claims. “We have an aircraft carrier out there that they’re complaining about, a second one on the way — and we can’t get a draft agreement out of them,” one official said. “What does that tell you about their intentions?”

During the third round in Switzerland, Iran presented a five-to-seven-page proposal described as a “needs-based agreement,” linking enrichment levels to projected civilian requirements. However, US officials said they were not permitted to take the document away for analysis. One official compared it to “Swiss cheese,” citing significant gaps.

A key dispute centred on Iran’s Tehran Research Reactor, which Iran claims is used for peaceful medical isotope production. The proposal sought to justify enrichment up to 20 per cent at the facility — well above the 3.67 per cent cap established under the 2015 nuclear accord.

Working with Rafael Grossi, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency, US officials said they found the reactor already had seven to eight years’ worth of unused fuel and that “no meaningful medical isotope production had taken place.”

“The claim that they were using a research reactor to do good for the Iranian people,” one official said, “was a complete and false pretence.”

In what officials called a “free fuel test,” the US offered Iran unlimited nuclear fuel at no cost. Iran rejected the proposal, calling it an insult to its dignity. “They twisted themselves into pretzels to explain why enrichment was their national right and their national pride,” one official said.

US officials further alleged that even as talks progressed, Iran was relocating nuclear and ballistic assets underground, including into newly constructed facilities designed to withstand bunker-buster strikes.

After the Switzerland meeting, negotiators briefed President Trump, concluding that while a deal similar to the 2015 accord might be achievable, it would not resolve the core issue. “If you want us to make an Obama-style deal — maybe an Obama-plus deal — we could probably get one done,” officials told the President. “But if you’re asking whether we’d be able to look you in the eye and say we’ve actually solved the issue — no.”

Military operations followed shortly thereafter.

Officials maintained that diplomacy remains an option if Iran fundamentally changes course — including abandoning enrichment and cutting ties with proxy groups such as Hezbollah and the Houthis.

“The door will be wide open,” one official said, but added that Washington currently believes Tehran “had never intended to give up the building blocks of a bomb.”

On February 28, the US and Israel carried out coordinated airstrikes across multiple Iranian cities, targeting military command centres, air-defence systems, missile sites, and key regime infrastructure. These strikes resulted in the deaths of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei and four senior military and security officials, with large explosions reported in Tehran and other major cities.

In response, Iran launched ballistic missiles and drones at US assets and allies across the region, including Israel, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Jordan, further widening the conflict in the Middle East and heightening risks for civilians and expatriates alike. (ANI)

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