Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian met Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei on Monday ahead of his trip to New York where he will attend the UN General Assembly, according to Iranian media reports.
During the meeting, Pezeshkian presented a report on his plans for the upcoming visit, state media said. Khamenei, in turn, "offered prayers and wished success for the president, while providing points and recommendations."
Some moderates in Tehran had urged him to seek Khamenei’s permission for a meeting with US President Donald Trump during the trip.
The Iranian president is scheduled to address the UN General Assembly on Wednesday.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said that the Western powers “must decide whether they choose cooperation or confrontation,” ahead of his meeting with his European counterparts in New York to discuss the looming snapback of UN sanctions on Iran.
“At different times, the Islamic Republic of Iran has been tested, and they know that we do not respond to the language of pressure and threats. Rather, we respond in the language of respect and dignity. If there is a solution, it is only a diplomatic one,” Araghchi said.
He added that he hoped consultations in the coming days would lead to progress, but warned that “otherwise, the Islamic Republic of Iran will take the measures it must.”
Araghchi warned that Iran's Cairo agreement with the UN nuclear watchdog will lose its validity, and Tehran will respond if the UN sanctions on Iran are restored on September 28.

Moderates are pushing for President Masoud Pezeshkian to meet Donald Trump at the United Nations in hopes of easing mounting pressure on Iran, but entrenched hardline opposition makes such a breakthrough highly unlikely.
That pressure is set to intensify with the automatic return of UN sanctions on September 28, unless a last-minute diplomatic breakthrough materializes.
Amid decades of bitter discord following the 1979 Iranian Reovlution, no US President has ever met his Iranian counterpart. US President Barack Obama spoke with President Hassan Rouhani by phone while the latter was in New York in 2013.
Reformists argue the question is not whether Pezeshkian should meet Trump, but whether he can secure Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s mandate to resume the pursuit of a nuclear deal. Without it, they say, the trip risks becoming another empty exercise.
“If the trip is going to be like last year or like those of past presidents, it is better not to go,” former Tehran mayor Gholamhossein Karbaschi told the moderate outlet Jamaran.
“If they want real change, he must first go to the Leader and other decision-makers and secure the necessary powers. Then he can meet senior American, European and regional officials.”
‘Courage required’
The reformist daily Sazandegi ran the headline “A Speech Is Not Enough,” urging Pezeshkian to act decisively.
Prominent centrist figure Hossein Marashi argued in an editorial that only “courageous decisions” could help avoid renewed sanctions.
Other moderates, including Amir Eghtenaei and Mohammad Atrianfar, pressed for clarity from Khamenei before departure, warning that without it the trip would yield “only repetitive words in routine meetings.”
Reformist author Abbas Abdi went further In Tehran’s other moderate daily, Etemad: unless Pezeshkian resolves the matter at home, he argued, the UN visit will be “pure loss.”
“When you return,” Abdi warned, “we should know whether the person who went to the UN was Pezeshkian representing the Iranian nation, or merely a shadow of his rivals wearing his clothes.”
‘Romantic illusion’
The "rivals" have of course been hard at work to head off any grand gestures in New Yorkk.
Kayhan, funded by the Supreme Leader’s office, derided the proposal as a “childish prescription” that would send a message of weakness.
In a biting editorial, it accused reformists of being so servile to the United States they would “probably even kiss Trump’s seat if asked.”
Javan, the IRGC-linked daily, called the idea “banana peels under Pezeshkian’s feet,” reminding readers that Trump himself tore up the 2015 nuclear deal.
Even the more measured Farhikhtegan said Washington has shown “no willingness to talk to Iran,” branding reformist hopes “romantic illusions.”
The past speaks
Analyst Amirali Abolfath told the moderate daily Ham-Mihan that even if Pezeshkian and Trump met, “just as Trump’s meetings with Putin or his letters to Kim Jong-un did not change US policy, this will not either.”
Others warned of humiliation.
President Trump could treat Pezeshkian as he did Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky, hardline journalist Pouyan Hosseinpour warned, “reducing the encounter to a moment of spectacle.”
This hardline consensus mirrors earlier UNGA seasons, when moderate presidents Mohammad Khatami and Hassan Rouhani likewise floated engagement but bowed to resistance at home.
The likely outcome is the same: no meeting, and a course set for confrontation as snapback sanctions take hold.
Diplomatic efforts to resolve the dispute over Iran's nuclear program are at a "difficult juncture," AFP reported citing the UN nuclear watchdog's chief Rafael Grossi.
"It's obviously quite a difficult juncture. It's a very difficult situation we are facing right now," he said, adding that talks between involved parties were planned in New York for Monday.

"If we have an atomic bomb and do not even use it, no one will dare to attack us," said Ahmad Aryaeinejad, a lawmaker from Malayer in western Iran.
Aryaeinejad, one of 71 signatories of a letter to Iran’s Supreme National Security Council urging changes in the country’s nuclear doctrine, made the remarks in an interview with Tehran-based Didban news website.





