Kremlin says Iran making its own decisions on nuclear talks with US
Asked about US president’s letter to Iranians offering negotiations on nuke program, Moscow says Tehran ‘independently formulates its position on key foreign policy issues’

The Kremlin, asked on Monday if Russia had held consultations with Iran before or after Tehran responded to a letter from US President Donald Trump urging the country to negotiate a nuclear deal, said Iran formulates its own policy positions.
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Saturday that Tehran would not be bullied into negotiations, a day after Trump said he had sent a letter urging Iran to engage in talks on a new nuclear deal.
Asked if Moscow had consulted with Tehran before or after Trump’s letter, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters:
“No. Iran is a sovereign country and independently formulates its position on key foreign policy issues. It is clear that very tense contacts are ahead.”
Trump had previously reimposed a policy of “maximum pressure” on Iran, aimed at preventing the country from building nuclear weapons, even while signaling openness to a new nuclear accord with Tehran.
Russia and Iran have drawn closer since the start of the war in Ukraine, with Tehran providing Moscow with drones.
Regarding possible talks on Iran’s nuclear program, Peskov said: “It is clear that Iran is seeking negotiations based on mutual respect, constructive negotiations.”
“We, of course, for our part, will continue to do everything that depends on us, everything that is possible, in order to bring this process of settling the Iranian nuclear dossier into a peaceful direction.”

In a meeting with senior Iranian officials Saturday, Khamenei said the aim of Washington’s offer for negotiations was to “impose their own expectations,” Iranian state media reported.
“The insistence of some bully governments on negotiations is not to resolve issues, but to dominate and impose their own expectations,” he said.
Earlier this month Peskov confirmed that Russia had agreed to assist Trump’s administration in communicating with Iran on various issues, including on Tehran’s nuclear program and its support for regional anti-US proxies that largely also seek Israel’s destruction.