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Iran Signals Openness To Nuclear Deal If Sanctions Are Discussed

Iran says it’s ready to talk — but only if sanctions are on the table.


In a significant diplomatic signal, Iran has indicated it is open to compromises in nuclear negotiations, provided the United States is willing to discuss lifting economic sanctions.


The statement comes amid renewed global attention on the stalled nuclear deal framework. Iranian officials suggested that flexibility is possible, but relief from financial restrictions remains central to any agreement.


In simple terms: no sanctions relief, no deal.


Why this matters: Sanctions have heavily impacted Iran’s economy, affecting oil exports, currency stability, and access to global markets. For the U.S. and its allies, the priority remains curbing Iran’s nuclear enrichment activities.


The diplomatic tension has wider implications. Oil markets, regional stability in the Middle East, and global geopolitics are closely tied to the outcome of these talks.


Previous negotiations have collapsed over trust deficits and sequencing — who makes the first move, and under what guarantees.


Now, with fresh signals emerging, the question is whether both sides are ready for a realistic compromise.


Nuclear diplomacy rarely moves fast.


But even small openings can reshape global equations.

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