It is still too early to definitively assess the ongoing negotiations with the United States and determine whether an agreement will be reached, according to Ebrahim Rezaei, the spokesperson for the Iranian parliament's National Security Committee.
Rezaei said, "We still have serious doubts about the ideas and intentions of the Americans and their will to reach an agreement."
However, Rezaei also mentioned a potential point of progress in the initial discussions. "In the initial negotiations, the Americans accepted Iran's right to enrichment, and we will by no means back down from uranium enrichment in Iran, for which blood has been shed,” he said without explaining whose blood.

Another member of the parliamentary committee, Yaghoub Rezazadeh, said on Sunday that that the indirect US talks have followed the Supreme Leader's guidelines, commending the Iranian negotiators for their regular briefings both before and after each round of discussions.
He said the committee will continue to assess the process in accordance with the so-called Strategic Action Law and the Supreme Leader's guidelines. Kazem Gharibabadi, deputy foreign minister, briefed the committee on the matter earlier in the day.
The Strategic Action Law to Lift Sanctions and Safeguard the National Interests of Iran, passed in 2020 aimed at more parliamentary influence on nuclear policy, mandated a rapid escalation of nuclear activities and a significant reduction in IAEA monitoring in reaction to the US' withdrawal from the JCPOA and the subsequent reimposition of sanctions.