A senior Iranian lawmaker said Tehran will not give up uranium enrichment under any potential agreement with the United States, stressing that enrichment levels of up to 20% — or at least 5% — will be maintained on Iranian soil.
Ahmad Bakhshayesh Ardestani, a member of the Iranian parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee, told local media that the outlook for ongoing negotiations with Washington is positive, but insisted Iran will not concede to US demands.
“America ultimately has to accept our conditions,” he said, adding that while US officials speak of “either deal or war,” their preference is clearly for an agreement, not conflict.
Ardestani accused the US of a “double game,” continuing sanctions and threats of war even while engaging in talks.
“They wrongly assume we are negotiating out of fear of war. We are confident the USwon’t attack,” he said.
The lawmaker also emphasized the need for binding guarantees from Washington to ensure any new agreement is upheld. “We need to be certain they won’t walk away from a future deal like they did with the JCPOA,” he said.
Ardestani suggested that US investment in Iran’s industrial sectors, particularly electricity, could act as a practical safeguard. “If American companies are involved on the ground, the cost of leaving the deal will rise for them.”
An Iranian lawmaker on Tuesday warned against allowing nuclear talks with the United States to dominate national policy, saying Iran should not be held hostage to the “ridiculous” statements of US President Donald Trump.
“It was never intended for indirect talks with the US to become the main issue and leave the country waiting on Trump’s ridiculous statements,” said Qasem Ravanbakhsh, a member of parliament from Qom, in a speech during a public session, according to ISNA.
Ravanbakhsh said the late President Ebrahim Raisi viewed negotiations only as a secondary tool and prioritized building ties with regional and independent powers. He urged the current administration to follow the same path and focus on domestic economic reforms instead of chasing foreign approval.

A senior Iranian official said on Tuesday that no specific details have been agreed regarding possible limits on uranium enrichment, following remarks by Iran’s foreign minister after the latest round of talks in Muscat.
“We have not entered into specifics on the level or scale of enrichment,” Deputy Foreign Minister Majid Takht-Ravanchi told Tasnim news agency. “What was stated was only a general framework.”
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi had said on Sunday that Iran may consider temporary limits on enrichment “in terms of scope, level, and quantity” as a confidence-building measure, but also emphasized that the principle of enrichment itself is non-negotiable.

Takht-Ravanchi added that any such measures would be conditional on reciprocal steps, including sanctions relief. “These are not unilateral actions,” he said. “They are part of mutual confidence-building to demonstrate the peaceful nature of our nuclear program.”
He also rejected speculation about a 25-year limit, calling such reports “unconfirmed and inaccurate.”

US President Donald Trump made a u-turn on his campaign against the Iran-backed Houthi militia after huge financial losses and American casualties became impossible to justify, according to the New York Times.
After 30 days of a ramped-up campaign against the Islamist militia amid its blockade of commercial shipping in the Red Sea region, US strikes had used around $1 billion of weapons and munitions.
In addition, two $67 million F/A-18 Super Hornets from America’s flagship aircraft carrier tasked with conducting strikes against the Houthis accidentally tumbled off the carrier into the sea.
On day 31 of the operation to quash the blockade in the key maritime trade route, Trump is reported to have requested a report, in which the numbers began to reflect an ever costly operation against the group only becoming more adamant in its own mission.
The Houthis shot down several American MQ-9 Reaper drones and continued to fire at naval ships in the Red Sea, including an American aircraft carrier, with the US failing to gain even air superiority over the group the US has listed as a terrorist organization.
“In those first 30 days, the Houthis shot down seven American MQ-9 drones (around $30 million each), hampering Central Command’s ability to track and strike the militant group,” the NYT reported.
“Several American F-16s and an F-35 fighter jet were nearly struck by Houthi air defenses, making real the possibility of American casualties,” the NYT said, according to multiple US officials.
When two pilots and a flight deck crew member were injured in the two episodes involving the F/A-18 Super Hornets, which fell into the Red Sea from the aircraft carrier Harry S. Truman within 10 days of each other, that fear became a reality.
The Pentagon reported that American strikes had hit multiple command and control facilities, air defense systems, advanced weapons manufacturing facilities and advanced weapons storage locations.
More than a dozen senior Houthi leaders had been killed, according to the US military, but the cost was mounting with the deployment of two aircraft carriers, additional B-2 bombers and fighter jets, as well as Patriot and THAAD air defenses, to the Middle East, officials told the NYT.
A White House spokeswoman, Anna Kelly, said in a statement to The New York Times that the US military had carried out more than 1,100 strikes, killing hundreds of Houthi fighters and destroying their weapons and equipment.
The chief Pentagon spokesman, Sean Parnell, said the operation was always meant to be limited. “Every aspect of the campaign was coordinated at the highest levels of civilian and military leadership,” he said in an emailed statement to the NYT.
Under former President Joe Biden, the US was leading a more than 20-nation coalition against the Houthi blockade, which had seen targeted strikes on the group’s infrastructure, but in a bid to free up global shipping, Trump cracked down on the Iran-backed group, before the costs began to raise eyebrows.
But now, while the Houthis have paused attacks on commercial shipping since the Oman-mediated ceasefire with the US, the group has continued targeting Israel, with one ballistic missile missing the country’s main airport by just meters earlier this month.
Ben-Gurion Airport in central Israel remains a target from the group, which has issued multiple statements warning it is no longer safe.
The Houthis say the attacks are in solidarity with the Palestinians in Gaza and they will not stop until a full ceasefire in Gaza.
Since the US agreed to the ceasefire, Israel has begun to step up its own operations against the Houthis independently of the US agreement.
Iran's insistence on indirect negotiations with the United States remains a weakness given the sensitive circumstances surrounding the nuclear talks, reformist Shargh daily wrote on Tuesday.
The newspaper acknowledged that an agreement could potentially be reached through text exchanges, but argued this approach is disproportionate to the high stakes of the discussions.
Given Iran's insistence on maintaining domestic enrichment, the newspaper expressed concern that the talks might not achieve progress under such conditions.
Iran's Revolutionary Guards aerospace commander briefed lawmakers on the country’s military posture, asserting that Iran's defense capabilities are stronger than ever and that no credible military threat currently exists against the Islamic Republic.
Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh, commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Aerospace Force, addressed members of the Iranian Parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee in a closed-door session, the committee's spokesperson, Ebrahim Rezaei, told Tasnim news agency.
General Hajizadeh provided a detailed report on regional security dynamics and adversarial activities, emphasizing Iran’s growing missile and drone capabilities. He said that Iran has significantly increased its deterrence power and operational readiness in recent years.

According to Rezaei, the IRGC commander described “True Promise 2”attack on Israel as the largest missile strike in the world to date, claiming over 75% of missiles launched in the operation hit designated targets. He said the strike sent a “clear message” to adversaries, particularly Israel.
The October attacks, while more successful at saturating Israeli air defenses than in April, did not appear to cause extensive damage. Israel said it had shot down most of the missiles and there had been no harm to its air force's capabilities.
Hajizadeh dismissed recent reports suggesting a decline in Iran’s defense strength as part of what he called a Western and Israeli media campaign aimed at undermining Iran’s image.
Fox News reported last year that Iran’s four Russian-made S-300 air defense systems allegedly destroyed by Israeli strikes, one in April and three in October 2024, constituted the entirety of the Islamic Republic's S-300 inventory.
Hajizadeh added that the country’s offensive capabilities have expanded, and that Iran’s adversaries are now more vulnerable to retaliation than ever before.
Committee members expressed unanimous support for the IRGC Aerospace Force and urged further investment in Iran’s defense sector, according to Tasnim.






