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Updated May 29, 2026 · 07:05
World News Updated May 29, 2026

US Pressure Brings Iran to Nuclear Talks, Says Treasury Secretary Bessent

The Trump administration claims its military and economic pressure has brought Iran to nuclear negotiations. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent says Iran is now discussing issues previous US administrations could not address. Bessent demands Iran surrender highly enriched uranium and restore Strait of Hormuz navigation. The administration warns of increased military action if talks fail to produce a peace deal.

US says pressure brought Iran to nuclear talks

Washington, May 29

The Trump administration claimed that its campaign of military and economic pressure has succeeded in bringing Iran to the negotiating table on its nuclear programme, with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent arguing that Tehran is now discussing issues that previous US administrations could not get it to address.

Bessent told reporters at a White House news conference that recent developments marked a significant shift in Iran's position and suggested that Washington's strategy was producing results.

"President Trump has done something that no other administration is able to do," Bessent told reporters.

"We have gotten the Iranians to talk about their nuclear program and to perhaps commit to not having one."

"That has never happened before. It had been off the table."

The comments came as the administration continued to signal optimism about ongoing contacts with Tehran while declining to confirm reports of a tentative agreement.

Bessent repeatedly stressed that any future deal would depend on Iran meeting key US demands, including surrendering its highly enriched uranium, abandoning any pursuit of a nuclear weapon and restoring free navigation through the Strait of Hormuz.

At the same time, he argued that the combination of military action and economic sanctions had altered Iran's calculations.

"I think when you look at the results of the kinetic action, of our economic pressure, it has worked to bring them to the table and have a discussion on this," he said.

The Treasury Secretary suggested that sanctions relief would remain contingent on concrete Iranian concessions and indicated that negotiations were still ongoing.

"Nothing is going to be on the table until we see the Strait of Hormuz open and the Iranians agree that they have to turn over the highly enriched uranium and that they can't have a nuclear program," he said.

Bessent also portrayed the Iranian leadership as weakened and struggling to coordinate its response following recent developments.

"The Iranian government, such as it is, is three pillars. It is the elected government, it is the IRGC, and it is the clerics, and they are having trouble communicating," he said.

While emphasising that President Donald Trump preferred diplomacy, Bessent also warned that the administration was prepared to increase pressure if talks failed.

"President Trump always prefers a peace deal," he said.

"We do not have unlimited patience."

"If President Trump doesn't think he can get a peace deal, then kinetic is back."

The administration's comments reflect a broader effort to portray its Iran policy as a combination of pressure and diplomacy, with officials arguing that sanctions and military actions have strengthened Washington's negotiating position rather than undermined it.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Good for the US if they're making progress, but India needs to watch this closely. Iran is our neighbour and partner – any instability there hurts us directly. Plus, if Iran gives up its nuclear program, it changes the whole power balance in West Asia. Pakistan will definitely use this to push their narrative with China. Stay alert, Delhi! 🇮🇳

Michael C

From a Western perspective, this is a rare win for Trump's unconventional approach. But let's be real – Iran is only talking because they're desperate, not because they've suddenly become peace-loving. The IRGC and clerics will never fully disarm. India should keep its options open and not bet everything on US-brokered deals.

Rohit P

All this talk about "pressure" and "diplomacy" is just theatre. The US has bombed Iran, imposed crippling sanctions, and now claims they're winning? What about the tens of thousands of Iranians suffering because of these policies? India has always favoured dialogue over coercion – that's the mature way. But what do I know, I'm just a common Indian citizen watching the circus from afar. 🎪

Sarah B

As an American, I'm cautiously optimistic, but sceptical. The same "maximum pressure" strategy failed with North Korea. Iran is more sophisticated – they've survived sanctions for decades. India, as a rising power, should be at the table, not just watching from the sidelines. Your strategic autonomy is your strength. Keep it.

Kavya N

The US Treasury Secretary's comments about Iran's leadership being "three pillars struggling to communicate

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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