US President Donald Trump held a meeting with his top national security aides on Tuesday to discuss Iran’s nuclear program, ahead of a second round of talks with Tehran scheduled for Saturday, Reuters reported.
A White House official confirmed the meeting took place in the Situation Room, noting the location was not unusual due to the room’s secure setting, where the president is frequently briefed.
A second source briefed on the meeting said the discussion focused on the Iran talks and possible next steps. US officials have been working on a framework for a potential nuclear agreement.

Iran's exiled crown prince Reza Pahlavi on Tuesday criticized US special envoy Steve Witkoff for saying in a post on X that a deal with Iran "must set a framework for peace, stability, and prosperity in the Middle East."
“Mr. Ambassador, the Islamic Republic is not a partner for peace," Pahlavi said in a post.
"The only arrangement that can set a framework for peace, stability, and prosperity in the Middle East is helping the people of Iran get rid of this weak, divided regime," he added.
Pahlavi described Trump’s renewed policy of Maximum Pressure against Tehran as "the most successful policy towards this regime in history" and called on the US government to "complement it with Maximum Support for the Iranian people."
"Don’t throw this warmongering regime a lifeline. As the people of Iran fight for peace, let them have a fighting chance.”

"The Secretary (Marco Rubio) has been clear, as has the President, as has been the ambassador (Steve Witkoff) that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon or an enrichment program," State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said.
The remarks come after US envoy Steve Witkoff said Iran must end its nuclear enrichment in any deal, appearing to reverse his suggestion in an interview which aired on Monday evening that a 3.67% enrichment cap would suffice.
"No one's negotiating in public," Bruce continued. "What matters is an end result - are parties agreeing, papers being signed. It is not what people say, but the actions they take."
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday cited a social media post by Iran’s Supreme Leader highlighting an earlier statement calling for the destruction of Israel as a sign of Iranian duplicity as it carries out talks with the United States.
“This is a post that the dictator of Iran Ayatollah Khamenei released today in which he explains why Israel must be destroyed. He is doing this during the negotiations with the Americans,” said the Israeli leader in a video shared on his YouTube channel.

“We are fighting for our existence,” Netanyahu said during a heavily-guarded visit to the Gaza border, where he was joined by Defense Minister Yisrael Katz and top military commanders.
An infographic published on Khamenei’s website on Tuesday described “the effort to eliminate the Zionist regime from the region as a religious, human duty," citing his March 31 speech.

US President Donald Trump held a meeting on Tuesday morning in the White House situation room about the ongoing nuclear talks with Tehran, Axios reported citing two sources with direct knowledge.
Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff, Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, CIA director John Ratcliffe, White House national security adviser Mike Waltz and other top officials were in attendance.
The White House sought to avoid an overlap between resumed US-Iran talks previously due to be held in Rome over the weekend and a visit by Vance to the Italian capital, the report added.
Iran said the venue would again be the Omani capital Muscat but the United States has yet to publicly comment on the matter.
Any future agreement with Iran must require the Islamic Republic to fully dismantle its nuclear and missile programs along the lines of Libya’s 2003 disarmament deal and end support for regional armed groups, an Israeli minister said on Tuesday.
“We support any agreement that ensures Iran has fully dismantled its nuclear program—modeled after Libya’s disarmament—ceases its support for terrorism and completely dismantles its missile program," Israel’s innovation minister and Security Cabinet member Gila Gamliel said.
“Iran has made no secret of its intent to destroy the State of Israel. These are not my words—they are saying it themselves, clearly, directly and without shame,” Gamliel told the Jewish News Syndicate, adding that Iranian leaders use similar rhetoric toward the United States.
She credited the shift in Iran’s behavior to the Trump administration’s willingness to use force. “The Iranian regime is skilled at negotiating, stalling and using time to its advantage,” she said.
Gamliel also referred to shared values between Israel and the US, including democracy and the fight against terror financing, and said she believes Washington will not accept any deal short of Iran’s complete disarmament.






