Moscow remains open to reviving the proposal if it helps ease Middle East tensions, Dmitry Peskov says
Russia’s proposal to host Iran’s enriched uranium remains on the table despite having been previously rejected by the US, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said.
The issue of Tehran’s nuclear program has long been a sticking point in talks with Washington. US President Donald Trump has demanded that Iran completely dismantle its nuclear infrastructure and hand over its enriched uranium stockpile, a proposal Tehran has rejected.
Iranian officials say they are not seeking a nuclear bomb but insist that uranium enrichment is their sovereign right and intended for civilian use. Tehran has previously indicated it could send some of its enriched uranium to a third country such as Russia and reportedly floated that idea in negotiations before the US and Israel launched their military campaign on February 28.
Speaking to India Today on Wednesday, Peskov said Russia’s offer had been made “quite a time ago” and that Tehran had been “okay with it” at the time. He called the plan “a very good solution,” but said “unfortunately, the American side rejected this proposal,” adding that Russian President Vladimir Putin “is ready to return to this initiative.”
Asked whether Russia would allow full oversight by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Peskov replied: “We are in full cooperation.” He said Iran was “one of the most heavily inspected” countries by the UN watchdog, which “has never acknowledged any attempt by Iran to make nuclear weapons.”
Peskov’s remarks come amid reports of ongoing indirect contacts over a possible second round of US-Iran negotiations after last week’s talks in Islamabad ended without a breakthrough. Tehran has accused Washington of a “breach of trust” and of trying to dictate terms.
The US reportedly proposed a 20-year moratorium on Iranian enrichment and the removal of Tehran’s existing stockpile. Trump has since said a 20-year ban would still not be long enough, while Iranian negotiators reportedly countered with a five-year moratorium and rejected US calls to confiscate Iran’s roughly 440 kg stockpile of enriched uranium.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Wednesday that Tehran has “an inalienable right” to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes.
