1 Feb 2025

Attacking our nuclear sites would be 'one of biggest mistakes US could make' says Iran foreign minister

3:12 pm on 1 February 2025
Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi speaks during United Nations day in Tehran, on October 22, 2013. The United Nations Day is devoted to making known to peoples of the world the aims and achievements of the United Nations Organization and runs as part of the United Nations Week, from 20 to 26 October. AFP PHOTO/ATTA KENARE (Photo by ATTA KENARE / AFP)

Iran Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi, pictured here on 22 October 2013 as the nation's Deputy Foreign Minister. Photo: AFP / Atta Kenare

Iran will respond immediately and decisively if its nuclear sites are attacked which would lead to an "all-out war in the region," Tehran's foreign minister has told Al Jazeera TV.

Israel and the US launching a military attack on Iranian nuclear facilities would be "one of the biggest historical mistakes the US could make," Abbas Araqchi said through a translator in an interview aired on Friday (local time).

Concerns have grown among Iran's top decision-makers that US President Donald Trump might in his second term empower Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to strike Iran's nuclear sites while further tightening US sanctions on its oil industry.

Those concerns, coupled with mounting anger within Iran over economic conditions, could drive Tehran toward engaging in negotiations with the Trump administration over the fate of its fast-advancing nuclear programme.

US President Donald Trump speaks about the mid-air crash between American Airlines flight 5342 and a military helicopter in Washington, in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on January 30, 2025 in Washington, DC. Divers pulled bodies from the icy waters of Washington's Potomac river Thursday after a US military helicopter collided midair with a passenger plane carrying 64 people, with officials saying there were likely no survivors.

US President Donald Trump (file photo). Photo: AFP

Araqchi suggested that the United States could free up blocked Iranian funds as a first confidence-building step between the two hostile countries.

"Iranian assets and funds have been frozen at various points by the US [which] has not fulfilled its previous pledges [to free them]. These things can be done by the US administration in order to bring confidence between us," Araqchi said.

In 2018, then-President Trump reneged on the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and a group of world powers and re-imposed harsh US sanctions as part of his "maximum pressure" policy against the country.

In response, Tehran breached the deal in several ways including by accelerating its uranium enrichment.

Trump has vowed to return to the policy he pursued in his previous term that sought to use economic pressure to force the country to negotiate a deal on its nuclear programme, ballistic missile programme and regional activities.

- Reuters

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