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Iran’s strongest card in nuclear talks: its highly enriched uranium

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People wave Iranian flags during a rally in Tehran on Friday.

People wave Iranian flags during a rally in Tehran on Friday. | West Asia News Agency / via REUTERS

VIENNA – Iran and the United States are in discussions to extend their ceasefire so as to start negotiations on issues including Tehran’s nuclear program, where Washington ⁠insists Iran must not be able to make a nuclear weapon.

While much of Iran’s uranium enrichment infrastructure was destroyed or badly damaged when Israel and the U.S. bombed it in June, a large part of the highly enriched uranium it amassed is thought to have survived. That is the biggest U.S. concern ahead of nuclear talks.

On Friday Trump said in a social media post that Iran must agree that the enriched uranium buried underground after earlier U.S. strikes ​be “unearthed” and destroyed in coordination with Iran and the U.N. nuclear watchdog.

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