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Iran Security Chief Holds Talks with Qatar's Emir in Doha
(MENAFN) Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani convened Wednesday with Ali Larijani, Iran's Supreme National Security Council secretary, for high-stakes discussions on bilateral cooperation and regional stability efforts, the Emiri Diwan announced.
The Doha meeting examined ways to bolster Qatar-Iran relations while addressing critical regional security challenges, according to an official statement from the Emiri Diwan.
Both parties assessed evolving regional dynamics and de-escalation strategies aimed at strengthening stability, alongside additional matters of shared regional and international concern.
Larijani's Qatar stop forms part of a broader Gulf tour that included Oman, arriving one day after he conducted talks with Omani officials following the inaugural round of indirect nuclear negotiations between Tehran and Washington.
Oman's Foreign Ministry confirmed that Sultan Haitham bin Tarik received Larijani in Muscat to discuss the latest Iran-US negotiation developments and "pathways to achieve a balanced and equitable agreement for all parties."
Friday's indirect US-Iran negotiations in Muscat unfolded against a backdrop of mounting tensions and reported American military reinforcements in the region. President Donald Trump subsequently announced that fresh talks would occur "early" next week, though he provided no specific timeline.
Tehran accuses the US administration and Israel of manufacturing justifications for military intervention and regime overthrow, vowing retaliation against any strike—regardless of scale. Iranian officials maintain that sanctions relief must accompany any nuclear program limitations.
Uranium enrichment remains the central flashpoint. Iran demands Western economic sanctions removal in exchange for nuclear activity restrictions. Washington, conversely, insists Iran completely cease enrichment and relocate its highly enriched uranium stockpile internationally.
The US has pushed to broaden negotiations to encompass Iran's ballistic missile capabilities and regional militia support, while Tehran has consistently rejected any discussions beyond its nuclear program.
The Doha meeting examined ways to bolster Qatar-Iran relations while addressing critical regional security challenges, according to an official statement from the Emiri Diwan.
Both parties assessed evolving regional dynamics and de-escalation strategies aimed at strengthening stability, alongside additional matters of shared regional and international concern.
Larijani's Qatar stop forms part of a broader Gulf tour that included Oman, arriving one day after he conducted talks with Omani officials following the inaugural round of indirect nuclear negotiations between Tehran and Washington.
Oman's Foreign Ministry confirmed that Sultan Haitham bin Tarik received Larijani in Muscat to discuss the latest Iran-US negotiation developments and "pathways to achieve a balanced and equitable agreement for all parties."
Friday's indirect US-Iran negotiations in Muscat unfolded against a backdrop of mounting tensions and reported American military reinforcements in the region. President Donald Trump subsequently announced that fresh talks would occur "early" next week, though he provided no specific timeline.
Tehran accuses the US administration and Israel of manufacturing justifications for military intervention and regime overthrow, vowing retaliation against any strike—regardless of scale. Iranian officials maintain that sanctions relief must accompany any nuclear program limitations.
Uranium enrichment remains the central flashpoint. Iran demands Western economic sanctions removal in exchange for nuclear activity restrictions. Washington, conversely, insists Iran completely cease enrichment and relocate its highly enriched uranium stockpile internationally.
The US has pushed to broaden negotiations to encompass Iran's ballistic missile capabilities and regional militia support, while Tehran has consistently rejected any discussions beyond its nuclear program.
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