U.S. officials: In the agreement referred to by Trump, Iran agrees to give up highly enriched uranium

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Deep Tide TechFlow News, May 24th, according to The New York Times, two U.S. officials revealed that a key element of the proposed agreement between Iran and the United States is that Tehran explicitly commits to relinquishing its high-enriched uranium stockpile. White House officials did not respond to requests for comment. Trump stated on Saturday that the U.S. is close to reaching an agreement with Iran to end the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz. However, he did not provide any details, and it is currently unclear what obstacles might still exist to reaching an agreement. U.S. officials said the proposal does not address the specific issue of how Iran will relinquish its stockpile; details will be discussed in the next round of negotiations on Iran's nuclear program. But Iran's overall declaration to take this step (a long-standing U.S. goal) is crucial to the agreement, especially when the overall deal might be challenged by Republican members of Congress. Iran has not made any public statements regarding the agreement announced by Trump. The report states that Iran initially refused to agree on its high-enriched uranium stockpile during the initial phase, demanding that it be postponed to the second phase of negotiations. However, U.S. negotiators said they explicitly conveyed through intermediaries to Iran that if no agreement on this issue could be reached in the initial phase, the U.S. would withdraw from negotiations and resume military actions.
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