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Egyptian Gazette
Home World

Europe-Iran talks yield little in Geneva

by News Wires
June 21, 2025
in World
French Minister for Foreign Affairs Jean-Noel Barrot, British Foreign Secretary David Lammy, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul and European Union High Representative for Foreign Affairs, Kaja Kallas, talk over lunch in Geneva, Switzerland June 20, 2025, during a meeting of European foreign ministers.

French Minister for Foreign Affairs Jean-Noel Barrot, British Foreign Secretary David Lammy, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul and European Union High Representative for Foreign Affairs, Kaja Kallas, talk over lunch in Geneva, Switzerland June 20, 2025, during a meeting of European foreign ministers.

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GENEVA – There were few signs of progress after European foreign ministers met their Iranian counterpart Friday in a bid to prevent conflict in the Middle East from escalating, although all signalled readiness to keep talking, despite major sticking points.

The foreign ministers of Germany, Britain, France, known as the E3, plus the EU, urged Iran to engage with the United States over its contentious nuclear programme even as Tehran has repeatedly insisted it will not open discussions with the Trump administration until Israeli strikes on Iran end.

The talks aimed to test Tehran’s willingness to negotiate a new nuclear deal despite there being no obvious prospect of Israel ceasing its attacks soon, diplomats said.

“The Iranian Foreign Minister has expressed his willingness to continue discussions on the nuclear programme and more broadly on all issues, and we expect Iran to commit to the discussion, including with the United States, to reach a negotiated settlement,” said French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot.

For his part, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said Iran was ready to consider diplomacy once Israel had ceased its attacks and been held accountable for its actions.

“In this regard, I made it crystal clear that Iran’s defence capabilities are not negotiable,” he said following the talks lasting around three hours in Geneva according to Reuters.

No date for a follow-up meeting was announced despite Europeans underscoring the small window for diplomacy.

US President Donald Trump has said he will decide within two weeks whether to join the Israeli strikes intended to smash Tehran’s nuclear capacity.

European ministers spoke beforehand with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio who signalled Washington was open to direct talks even as it mulls the strikes, diplomatic sources said.

Washington did not confirm that, though broadcaster CNN quoted a US official saying Trump supported diplomacy by allies that could bring Iran closer to a deal.

Britain’s foreign minister David Lammy said the European countries were eager to continue talks with Iran. “This is a perilous moment, and it is hugely important that we don’t see regional escalation of this conflict,” he said.

Two European diplomats said the E3 did not believe that Israel would accept a ceasefire in the near term and that it would be difficult for Iran and the US to resume negotiations.

They said the idea was to begin a parallel negotiating track, initially without the US, on a new deal that would involve tougher inspections, and potentially on Iran’s ballistic missile programme, while allowing Tehran some notional enrichment capacity.

The Trump administration is demanding Iran stop uranium enrichment altogether, whereas the E3 have in past talks left it some scope to enrich for civil ends in exchange for extremely strict international inspections.

On Friday, French President Emmanuel Macron shifted closer to Trump’s position, saying that any new deal with Tehran needed to go towards zero enrichment.

A senior Iranian official told Reuters Iran is ready to discuss limitations on its uranium enrichment but said the prospect of zero enrichment would undoubtedly be rejected.

In a speech at the United Nations in Geneva before the E3 meeting, Araqchi accused Israel of a “betrayal of diplomacy”, while Israel’s envoy in Geneva raised a “vehement objection” to the minister addressing the UN’s Human Rights Council.

Geneva was the scene of an initial accord between Iran and world powers to curb its nuclear programme in return for sanctions lifting in 2013 before a comprehensive deal in 2015.

Tags: BritainEuropeGenevaIranIsraelMiddle East
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