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The secretary of state, Marco Rubio, testifies before a Senate foreign relations committee hearing on Capitol Hill on Tuesday. Photograph: Kylie Cooper/Reuters View image in fullscreen The secretary of state, Marco Rubio, testifies before a Senate foreign relations committee hearing on Capitol Hill on Tuesday. Photograph: Kylie Cooper/Reuters Rubio says Iran ready to discuss nuclear deal as Tehran declares peace talks over Secretary of state appears before Congress and repeats Trump administration’s claims that a deal is within reach Iran has agreed to negotiate aspects of its nuclear program that it had refused to discuss even a month ago, the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio , has claimed, even as Tehran announced it was halting peace talks and moving to fully close the strait of Hormuz. Appearing before the Senate foreign relations committee for the first time since the Trump administration launched the war against Iran – which was pitched as a short, weeks-long war, in February – Rubio repeated the Trump administration’s claims that a deal was within reach. He arrived on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, the morning after Iran’s state-affiliated Tasnim News Agency reported that Tehran would stop exchanging messages with Washington through intermediaries, pointing to Israel’s military operations in Lebanon as a ceasefire violation. Iran threatens to suspend peace talks after ‘violation of ceasefire’ in Lebanon Read more Donald Trump later claimed conversations “have been going on continuously” and insisted it was false to suggest officials had stopped speaking. And Rubio insisted progress could be made soon. “There is the prospect before us, which could happen today, it could happen tomorrow, it could happen next week – that for the first time, certainly in my memory, they have agreed to negotiate aspects of their nuclear program that just a month ago” they said they would not, he told senators. Rubio also claimed that Mojtaba Khamenei – who succeeded his father Ali Khamenei after the supreme leader was killed in the opening US-Israeli strikes on 28 February, and has not been seen in public since assuming office – was alive, and more involved in the regime’s efforts. “I think there are indications out there that he is increasingly engaging at some level,” he said. On the military picture, Rubio suggested that Iran’s missile program had been “substantially degraded”, its launcher capacity reduced, and its drone-building capability “eroded”. “There is no Iranian navy,” he said. “It lies at the bottom of the ocean, and will soon, within a number of years, be prime fishing spots, because they’ll turn into reefs.” Rubio conceded the regime still has “a lot of drones”, however. “Because these are easy to make,” he said . “This is a pervasive problem around the world.” Such claims about the vast destruction of Iranian’s military capabilities have been contested. The New York Times reported in May that Iran had retained roughly 70% of its prewar missile stoc

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Consistent with the Trump administrations rhetoric, Secretary Rubios statement is nothing more than a political stunt designed to distract from the real issues. The Iranian regimes track record of non-compliance with nuclear agreements is a well-documented fact. Lets focus on tangible steps that actually address threats to our national security.

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Its disappointing to see Rubio engage in this political circus instead of addressing the real issues. Irans nuclear program is a serious threat to global peace, and meaningful negotiations require a willingness to engage in good faith. Lets hope that cooler heads prevail and that a genuine dialogue can take place.

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Rubios comments are a reminder that diplomacy requires patience and perseverance. While progress may not always be linear, the willingness to engage in discussions is crucial for long-term stability. Lets hope both sides can work towards a peaceful resolution.