Iran’s ties with Russia are stronger than ever and have reached an unprecedented level of closeness, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Friday.
“Ties between Iran and Russia may never have been this close and strong in our history,” Araghchi said during a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, according to Iranian media.
Araghchi said he had delivered a written message from Iran’s Supreme Leader to President Vladimir Putin during a lengthy meeting the day before, describing Russia as Iran’s main strategic partner.
He also referred to the recently signed comprehensive strategic agreement between the two countries, calling it a foundation for deepened cooperation and a long-term roadmap for bilateral ties.

An Iranian lawmaker said President Donald Trump’s threats and contradictory positions led to indirect talks between Tehran and Washington, despite Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei having allowed negotiations.
“The Supreme Leader allowed the negotiations, but because of Trump’s contradictory positions and the threats he raised, the talks happened indirectly,” said Mohammad Mahdi Shahriari, a member of parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Commission.
Shahriari said the talks should be approached with rationality and based on the national interest, not political factionalism. He expressed hope that the next round, scheduled for Saturday, would bring positive results.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said President Vladimir Putin’s meeting with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on Thursday reflected the “unprecedented dynamics” of political dialogue between the two countries.
“Yesterday, there was a long and substantive conversation with the President of the Russian Federation, Vladimir Putin. He was very pleased with the discussion,” Lavrov said during a press conference with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on Friday.
“The meeting underlined the unprecedented dynamics of our political dialogue,” he added.

The live broadcast of the upcoming talks between Iran and the United States in Rome is not under the control of Iranian media, state media chief said on Friday.
“The matter is not in our hands,” said Peyman Jebeli, head of the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB), adding that decisions on live coverage must be made by both negotiating teams.
He said Iranian state media had close coordination with the negotiating team and the foreign ministry during the first round of talks in Muscat and would continue that approach. “The aim is to ensure reporting that is accurate, aligned with national policy, and shaped by our own narrative,” Jebeli said, according to ILNA news agency.
Jebeli added that IRIB’s correspondent is expected to accompany the Iranian delegation in Rome as they did in the previous round.

Italy will not take part directly in the upcoming nuclear talks between the United States and Iran but may host informal meetings at its foreign ministry, the Italian think tank Institute for International Political Studies (ISPI) said on Friday.
Citing diplomatic sources, ISPI said the second round of indirect negotiations is expected to take place in a hotel in Rome on April 19, following an earlier round held in Muscat on April 12.

Iran has indicated a willingness to open its markets to American investors if a nuclear deal is reached, but some experts argue that expecting not only US investment but any significant foreign investment is highly unrealistic.
“Speaking of a trillion-dollar investment from the United States is nothing but a dream and fantasy,” said Ferial Mostofi, head of the Investment Services Center at the Tehran Chamber of Commerce, in an interview with Shargh daily. “How can we expect foreign investors to come to Iran when domestic investors move their capital out of the country?”
In its article titled “Foreign Investment: Mirage or Reality?”, Shargh referred to a claim circulating in Iranian circles that Tehran is seeking an agreement with the United States to guarantee $1 trillion in US investment over twenty years. “This claim means the United States would have to invest $50 billion in Iran annually.”
Shargh also recalled past official claims that China had pledged $400 billion in investments in Iran’s oil, gas, petrochemical, and transport sectors, while Russia’s Gazprom was expected to invest $40 billion in Iran’s gas industry. The article pointed out that none of those promised investments ever materialized.
“[A trillion-dollar US investment] is exactly like the much-discussed $400 billion investment from China [over twenty-five years],” the article said, arguing that China has not—and likely will not—invest such a large sum in Iran due to several factors, including inadequate hard infrastructure in transportation and energy, lack of transparency, and political risks.
Iran is in urgent need of foreign investment to revitalize its aging oil and gas infrastructure and to support other key sectors, including its large but struggling automotive industry.
According to the 2024 report of the UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD), Iran attracted $1.4 billion in foreign direct investment (FDI) in 2023. The meager figures stood at $1.5 billion in 2022 and $1.4 billion in 2021. The highest recorded FDI level was over $5 billion in 2017, following the implementation of the 2015 JCPOA nuclear deal which lifted UN economic sanctions against Iran.
President Masoud Pezeshkian said recently that Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has no objection to American investment in Iran. Foreign minister Abbas Araghchi, writing in a Washington Post op-ed, put the onus on Washington to allow American companies to access what he described as a “trillion-dollar opportunity” in Iran. Neither Pezeshkian nor Araghchi provided specific details.
The Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) linked Javan newspaper appeared to support the idea of American investment in Iran in an article it published one day before the first round of Tehran-Washington talks in Muscat on April 8. “It is possible that we accept that some American companies have the opportunity to invest or sell their products, if Iran's economic interests are met. If sanctions are lifted, these companies will be eager to invest, and Iran will be unlikely to object.”
However, any American investment in Iran would require the removal of at least some of the primary US sanctions, many of which predate the nuclear-related sanctions.
While Khamenei has not officially banned American or other foreign investment, he has consistently advocated for stronger economic ties with Eastern countries such as Russia and China, expressing deep mistrust toward the West.
Despite publicly distancing himself from economic policymaking, Khamenei is widely believed to exert substantial control over Iran’s economy through political influence, economic entities under his authority, and the IRGC’s involvement. In one notable instance, he banned imports of South Korean electronics brands LG and Samsung in August 2021 to pressure Seoul over Iran's frozen funds.





