European Ministers to Hold Nuclear Talks with Iran on Friday in Geneva: Reuters
- Foreign ministers from Britain, France, Germany, and the EU will hold nuclear talks with Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on Friday in Geneva.
- The talks follow escalating conflict marked by Israeli airstrikes on Iranian nuclear and military sites, followed by Iranian missile responses last week.
- The European ministers, including Jean-Noël Barrot, David Lammy, Johann Wadephul, and Kaja Kallas, aim for negotiations focused on Iran's nuclear program and regional issues.
- Barrot said Europeans stand ready to negotiate to achieve a lasting rollback of Iran's nuclear and ballistic missile programs, while Araghchi rejected talks with the U.S. as long as Israeli strikes continue.
- The meeting represents the first direct Western-Iranian official contact since the conflict began and could shape efforts to prevent further escalation in the region.
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In Geneva, foreign ministers from Tehran, Berlin, Paris and London meet to resume the negotiating thread, while the US imposes new sanctions on the country attacked by Israel.

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David Lammy flew from Washington to Geneva on Friday to meet Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi.
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Britain, France, Germany and the European Union all rushed their foreign ministers to Geneva for talks with Iran in a desperate attempt to give peace a chance. But it is not clear that peace now is the best option.
The French, German and British Foreign Ministers met with their Iranian counterpart this Friday in Geneva.
In Geneva, the chief diplomats of Germany, France and the United Kingdom have been discussing with their Iranian colleague Abbas Araqchis for almost four hours on Tehran's withdrawal from the nuclear conflict, and Iran's opposition was emerging. British Foreign Minister David Lammy appealed to Iran to continue negotiating with the US on a nuclear programme limitation. "We (...) urge Iran to continue its talks with the United States," Lammy said …
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