Israel’s Minister of Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer, in a recent meeting in Washington DC, told senior US officials that Iran’s underground nuclear sites could be destroyed if the US Air Force used its 30,000-pound bunker buster bombs, the Washington Post reported on Friday, citing former Israeli and US intelligence officials familiar with the meeting.

A team of approximately 12 working-level experts from various US government agencies will discuss more granular details about a path to a new nuclear agreement, CNN reported Friday, citing a source familiar with the matter.
The talks in Oman on Saturday will cover elements including the scope of sanctions relief on Tehran and limitations on Iran’s nuclear program, the report added.
On Thursday, State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said Michael Anton, the department’s head of policy planning, will lead the US technical team in the upcoming talks.
Earlier, The Washington Post reported that a team of around a dozen representatives from various departments — including State, Treasury, and the intelligence community — convened at the State Department for the first time this week to discuss the still-undetermined parameters of the administration’s demands on Iran, which are awaiting a final decision from President Donald Trump.

A top Iranian cleric has described ongoing talks with the administration of US President Donald Trump led by his special envoy and fellow property magnate Steve Witkoff as akin to a real estate negotiation in which Iran will prevail.
Mostafa Pourmohammadi, secretary of the Combatant Clergy Association and a former interior and justice minister, said Iran would get a fair deal after initial posturing and an expected back and forth.
“You want to buy a house. The seller says one million. You walk away. He tells you to wait and brings in a broker. Then suddenly the asking price drops. In your mind, you're thinking 500 or 600 is reasonable. The broker says 750, and the deal is done,” the veteran insider and conservative said in comments carried by state media.
“Neither the seller really intended to sell for 750, nor were you ready to buy at that price. But in the end, it gets resolved. That’s negotiation.”
Pourmohammadi broadly defended Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s approval of negotiations with the United States, in remarks that appeared aimed at easing concerns in conservative quarters.
Khamenei’s evolving stance, he said, reflected “wise leadership” in a rapidly changing world. “You cannot say the Leader’s words at one time apply to all times and all cases,” Pourmohammadi said in remarks carried by local media.
“The world is turning moment by moment. We must have the power to make wise and timely decisions. This is the logic.”
Khamenei had in February called negotiations with Washington “unwise, undignified, and dishonorable.” His recent support for talks mediated by Oman and taking place during Donald Trump’s return to the presidency marks a notable shift, particularly given longstanding hardline distrust of US intentions.
Pourmohammadi said President Trump’s public threats were part of a broader political strategy. Referring to a letter Trump sent to Khamenei in March, he said: “If Trump had written in his letter what he said in public, he would never have received a reply. But his formal letters had a different tone, revealing his real politics.”
The cleric framed the current moment as part of a broader strategic contest. “It’s not as if there’s only one moment, one issue,” he said. “This is a psychological war, and the Leader is managing it with wisdom.”
Pourmohammadi has held several senior roles across administrations but is widely known for his involvement in the mass execution of political prisoners in 1988 while serving on a state-appointed committee at Evin Prison.
Human rights organizations and exiled dissidents have linked him to the killings, which Amnesty International described as crimes against humanity. Pourmohammadi has defended the executions in past interviews, saying they were in line with the Islamic Republic's wartime policy.

"Iran I think is going very well. We'll see what happens," US President Donald Trump told reporters on Friday.
Trump criticized former President Joe Biden for failing to resolve tensions with Tehran during his term.
"We're working on plenty of things that shouldn't be worked on, because none of this stuff should've happened. This should've been taken place by Biden. It should've been fixed by Biden. But he couldn't do it," Trump said.

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and his delegation have arrived in Muscat for a third round of talks with the United States set to begin on Saturday, according to a spokesman for the Iranian Foreign Ministry.
"We are resolved to secure our nation's legitimate & lawful right to use nuclear energy for peaceful purposes while taking reasonable steps to demonstrate that our program is entirely peaceful," Esmaeil Baghaei said in a post on X announcing Araghchi's arrival.
"Termination of unlawful & inhumane sanctions in an objective and speedy manner is a priority that we seek to achieve," he added.
A senior Iranian lawmaker said Tehran could consider reopening embassies with the United States if direct negotiations and trade ties resume.
“If an agreement with the United States takes shape and commercial relations are established, it is natural that the two countries would reopen their consulates and embassies,” said Beytollah Abdollahi, a member of parliament’s Planning and Budget Committee, according to the Iranian news outlet Rouydad24.
Abdollahi also appeared to push back against the notion that direct talks with Washington are off-limits. “It’s not like a verse from the Quran that says we must never negotiate directly with America,” he said.






