Iran Rejects Limits on Uranium Enrichment and Missiles as Trump Presses ‘Peace Through Strength’


trump ayatollah iran nuclearby Emmitt Barry, Worthy News Washington D.C. Bureau Chief

(Worthy News) – Iran’s leadership has flatly refused to abandon uranium enrichment or scale back its ballistic missile program, even as President Donald Trump intensifies a dual-track strategy of diplomacy and military pressure aimed at forcing a broader agreement with Tehran.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said over the weekend that Tehran will never give up uranium enrichment, declaring that Iran would not be intimidated by the threat of war. Speaking after renewed U.S.-Iran talks in Oman, Araghchi insisted that enrichment is a sovereign right and warned that no outside power has the authority to dictate Iran’s behavior—even if conflict with the United States were imposed.

Araghchi also made clear that Iran’s ballistic missile program was never on the negotiating table during discussions with U.S. officials. The missile arsenal, capable of striking Israel and U.S. military installations across the Middle East, remains a red line for Tehran despite repeated American and Israeli demands that it be included in any future deal.

The talks in Muscat marked the first direct engagement between Washington and Tehran in months and came after last year’s failed negotiations to limit Iran’s nuclear activities. While Araghchi described the discussions as a “good start,” he acknowledged that no breakthroughs were achieved and that trust between the two sides remains minimal. President Trump, however, described the talks as “very good,” signaling continued U.S. willingness to pursue a deal—so long as Iran makes meaningful concessions.

At the same time, the Trump administration has underscored that diplomacy is backed by force. The United States has surged additional military assets into the region, including the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group now operating in the Arabian Sea. The carrier recently shot down an Iranian drone that Pentagon officials said approached the ship aggressively, highlighting the volatility surrounding the talks.

U.S. Central Command chief Brad Cooper joined Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and White House adviser Jared Kushner during the Oman discussions and later visited the Abraham Lincoln, a move widely viewed as a deliberate signal of American readiness to strike if negotiations collapse. U.S. lawmakers said the presence of America’s top regional military commander at the talks reinforced the administration’s message that diplomacy is being pursued alongside credible military pressure.

Iran’s missile and nuclear capabilities remain central to regional fears. Prior to heavy Israeli airstrikes last year, Tehran was estimated to possess between 1,000 and 3,000 ballistic missiles. A Defense Intelligence Agency report warned Iran could develop up to 60 intercontinental ballistic missiles by 2035. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is expected to meet President Trump in Washington this week, has insisted that any agreement must impose strict limits on both uranium enrichment and missile development, as well as halt Iran’s support for terror groups such as Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis.

Despite mounting pressure, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian echoed Araghchi’s defiance, saying Iran views the talks as constructive but will not respond to what he described as the “language of force.” Tehran continues to seek relief from crippling U.S. sanctions in exchange for limited confidence-building measures, while denying Western accusations that it is pursuing nuclear weapons—claims undercut by its enrichment levels and obstruction of international inspections.

As negotiations continue, the standoff reflects two sharply opposed positions: an Iranian regime determined to preserve enrichment and missile capabilities, and a U.S. administration pressing a strategy of “peace through strength,” signaling that diplomacy remains possible—but only alongside the unmistakable threat of military action.

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