A leading Iranian newspaper with ties to the Supreme Leader dismissed ongoing nuclear talks as fruitless and insisted Tehran will not abandon uranium enrichment.
“Neither Iran will give up its borderless right to enrichment, which is recognized in the NPT, nor will America abandon sanctions it uses as a tool against Iran,” the editorial said in Kayhan on Sunday.
The piece accused Washington of entering talks without any intent to compromise, describing both sides as locked into irreconcilable positions.
“The final stop for negotiations, from America’s view, is sedition and chaos inside Iran,” wrote editor and Khamenei representative Hossein Shariatmadari.
He accused Washington of using “contradictory positions” as a tactic to prolong talks while tying Iran’s economy to a stalled process aimed at destabilization.

“We do not have hope yet, because the American side is still insisting on zero enrichment and I know the Islamic Republic of Iran will never agree with zero enrichment,” said Iranian lawmaker Ebrahim Rezaei, a spokesperson for the parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy Committee.
“I got disappointed and do not have much hope that the negotiations will lead to a deal. We are preparing for plan B," he was quoted as saying in an interview with CNN, without providing further details.

Truck drivers across Iran staged a third consecutive day of strikes on Saturday, with videos sent to Iran International showing a broad and coordinated stoppage from Isfahan and Borujerd to Mashhad and ports in the south.
The strike, called by the national union of truckers and drivers, has emptied highways, halted freight movement, and drawn in voices from across the country demanding action on long-standing sector grievances.
In a video from Kaveh Industrial City in Markazi province, a driver said: “Please respect each other. These men have debts, they have loans, but they stood their ground so we can fix things.”
Another video from Firoozkouh showed drivers refusing to take loads, stating: “Not a single truck moved freight today. Every driver is on strike.”
Protesters cite steep insurance costs, delays in diesel quota refills and low cargo rates as key reasons for the strike.
A driver from Dezful sent a message saying, “These trucks’ freight rates are too low. They either don’t get fuel or the diesel fuel cards are topped up late. Why has truck and driver insurance gotten so expensive?”
The scale of the action was visible in near-empty transport corridors. A driver on the Tehran-Isfahan highway filmed the road devoid of freight trucks, saying: “Today is Saturday, May 24. This is the Tehran–Isfahan highway, and there’s not a single trailer or truck in sight.”
Another video from Sabzevar showed trailers honking in unison.
In Kazerun, farmers were seen protesting the lack of available transport for their produce.
A driver from Zarand, Kerman, urged others to maintain discipline: “This video is from Zarand. No one should enter the city until we can support each other. Stand together.”
The drivers’ union, which earlier announced, “Our trucks are silent, but our voices are louder than ever,” said the strike would continue until authorities formally commit to resolving their demands.
“We won’t be deceived again,” the union said in a statement. “No driver will turn on the engine until our demands are officially recognized and enforced.”
Exiled prince Reza Pahlavi expressed support for the truckers’ nationwide strike on Friday, writing on X: “As one of the country’s vital economic pillars, your protest against unjust working and living conditions gives voice to the shared suffering of millions of Iranians crushed for years under injustice, incompetence, and corruption.”
Launched on May 18 in Bandar Abbas, the coordinated protest has since spread to over 35 cities, with truckers pledging to hold out for a full week or possibly longer if their demands remain unmet.
"Iran is ready to store its enriched uranium stockpiles under 1,000 meters of earth, wherever they (international community) say — but within Iran," said Brigadier General Hossein Daghighi, a top advisor to the chief of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
"We have said that we do not possess nuclear weapons, but now they say we should not even have enrichment — we do not accept that."


Iranian dissident filmmaker Jafar Panahi won the Palme d'Or for his film It Was Just an Accident at the 78th Cannes Film Festival, using the moment to call for unity among Iranians worldwide in their struggle for freedom at home.
Panahi, who has faced imprisonment and a 15-year travel ban for his outspoken criticism of the Islamic Republic, received a standing ovation as Cate Blanchett presented the award.
In his acceptance speech, he urged unity among Iranians striving for democracy: "Let's set aside our differences. The important thing now is the freedom of our country, so that no one would dare to tell us what to wear or what film to make."
France's foreign minister Jean-Noël Barrot said in a French post on his X account, "In an act of resistance against the Iranian regime's oppression, Jafar Panahi wins a Palme d'Or, reigniting hope for freedom fighters around the world."
The thriller, co-produced by Iran, France, and Luxembourg, was made clandestinely without official permission from Iranian authorities and features women not wearing the hijab, challenging Iran's compulsory dress code laws.
Panahi who managed to leave Iran and attend his film's premiere at Cannes after a 15-year travel ban, said on Wednesday he would be returning immediately to Iran after attending the Cannes Film Festival to begin work on his next film despite being free to travel again.
Panahi was released on bail from Tehran's notorious Evin Prison in February 2023 after he started a hunger strike.
Making history
Panahi has achieved a rare distinction in the world of cinema by winning the top honors at all three major European film festivals. His 2025 Palme d'Or adds to his previous accolades: the Golden Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival for Taxi in 2015 and the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival for The Circle in 2000.
This accomplishment places Panahi among a select group of filmmakers who have achieved this triple crown of European cinema. The other directors who have earned this distinction are Michelangelo Antonioni, Robert Altman, and Henri-Georges Clouzot.
A senior Iranian official said on Wednesday that preserving the country’s nuclear capabilities remains a national priority, emphasizing that Iran seeks peaceful use of atomic energy and is not pursuing nuclear weapons.
Brigadier General Ghasem Ghoreishi, deputy head of Iran’s Basij paramilitary force, said nuclear energy is essential for Iran’s future and development in sectors such as medicine, agriculture, and electricity production.
“Nuclear energy is among the Islamic Republic’s main priorities,” Ghoreishi said, adding that maintaining uranium enrichment and nuclear capacity is “even more crucial for Iran’s tomorrow.”
Arguing in support of the need for uranium enrichment in the country, a sticking point in the current talks, Ghoreishi also criticized Western sanctions, recalling past embargoes on basic goods during the Iran-Iraq war. “Those who didn’t give us barbed wire then, will not hand over enriched uranium now,” he said.
“Our goal is to protect the nation’s interests—either through diplomacy or resistance.”
