Tehran’s position in nuclear negotiations remains unchanged, and the United States and Israel must accept Iran’s terms, the security adviser to Iran’s armed forces chief said on Wednesday.
“Our position is firm and will continue to the end,” said Brigadier General Hossein Ashtari, who previously served as Iran’s national police chief. “It is the Americans and the Israelis who must accept our terms. We have already declared our position and remain committed to it.”
He said the government, leadership, and people of Iran are aligned on this approach. “Everyone is coordinated,” he added.
The conservative daily Farhikhtegan warned on Wednesday that Iran could cut off access to its nuclear sites and expel inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) if faced with a serious military threat.
The editorial came ahead of IAEA chief Rafael Grossi’s visit to Tehran and amid heightened tensions surrounding Iran’s nuclear program and upcoming talks with the United States.
“If a serious military threat emerges, Iran will expel the inspectors, cut their access, and move nuclear materials to locations beyond reach,” the paper wrote. It described the policy as a defensive security measure in response to threats from Israel and recent remarks by the White House.
Farhikhtegan accused the IAEA of political bias and said Grossi’s previous visits had yielded cooperation only from Iran. “Despite Iran’s compliance, the agency has published reports that fuel anti-Iran resolutions,” it said.
Iran’s ultra-hardline Kayhan newspaper, overseen by a representative of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, accused the United States of crossing Tehran’s red lines following US remarks urging Iran to halt all uranium enrichment.
Editor Hossein Shariatmadari wrote that Steve Witkoff, the US special envoy to the Middle East, exposed Washington’s “true intentions” through his tone after the first round of indirect talks in Oman, despite efforts to appear constructive.
The editorial came in response to a post by Witkoff on X, in which he wrote: “Iran must stop and eliminate its nuclear enrichment and weaponization program.” The message was posted just hours after he told Fox News the US might accept limited enrichment under a Trump-led deal.
“Witkoff’s latest comments leave no doubt that America has failed the very first test of ‘verifying its claims,’” Shariatmadari wrote. “Trump and his envoy tried to hide their blackmail-driven demands, but the signs were clear — Trump was thinking out loud.”
He added that US officials were raising topics Iran has repeatedly ruled out and warned that Washington was laying the groundwork for “disarming the Islamic Republic and plowing its land and people.”

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and special envoy Steve Witkoff are expected in Paris later this week for talks with French officials that will include discussions on Iran, Politico reported on Wednesday.
Witkoff is set to meet French President Emmanuel Macron, while Rubio will hold talks with Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot, according to people familiar with preparations for the trip. Iran, Ukraine, and trade are all on the agenda.
The visit follows ongoing US efforts to shape a framework for a potential nuclear agreement with Tehran, as well as parallel diplomatic efforts involving European and regional players. France has been engaged in its own mediation efforts across several files.
The Paris meetings come days after Witkoff met Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow to discuss Ukraine. The White House described that meeting as another step in the broader negotiating process.

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.
Israel's foreign minister Gidon Saar and British foreign secretary David Lammy discussed Iran's nuclear program among other issues in a meeting in London on Tuesday, the Israeli foreign ministry announced.





