Iran wants to make a “deal” more than the U.S., President Donald Trump said Tuesday, ahead of another round of scheduled talks with Tehran and amid a build up of American forces in the Middle East.
Tehran’s refusal to commit to not developing nuclear weapons remains the key sticking point holding up an agreement, Trump said at a pre-address meeting hours before the State of the Union speech in Washington, Joe Kernen reported.
The U.S. and Iran are expected to hold talks on Thursday in Geneva, Switzerland, with a focus on Iran’s nuclear program.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday that he was still working on the proposal and political leadership in Tehran has yet to sign off on it. He said the proposal would consist of elements that accommodate both sides’ “concerns and interests.”
Araghchi added that the proposal will be discussed in Geneva and both sides will work on a text to try and reach “a fast deal.”
The earlier rounds of negotiations failed to deliver a meaningful breakthrough and tensions continued to run high with Trump threatening limited airstrikes on Iran.
Following the second round of negotiations in Geneva last week, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said in a post on X on Sunday that the recent talks had “yielded encouraging signals” but warned that Iran was prepared for “any potential scenario.”
Tensions have escalated sharply in recent weeks as Washington builds up its military presence in the region and Trump warning that “really bad things” would happen unless Tehran agreed to a deal over the future of its nuclear program.


