The US and Iran will hold “direct talks” over a possible nuclear deal on Saturday, says Donald Trump.
The meeting has also been confirmed by Iran’s foreign minister who said the talks would be “indirect” but could be “as much an opportunity as it is a test”.
The US president on Monday said discussions between Washington and Tehran would be at a “very high level” and warned it would be a “very bad day for Iran” if no agreement were reached.
Trump disclosed the talks after a White House meeting with Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu, who has also previously raised the prospect of attacking Iran to stop it from acquiring nuclear weapons.
Speaking in the Oval Office, Trump said: “We have a very big meeting on Saturday [with Iran], and we’re dealing with them directly… And maybe a deal is going to be made, that would be great.”
Trump later said Iran would be in “great danger” if the talks were not successful, adding: “Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon, and if the talks aren’t successful, I think it’ll be a very bad day for Iran.”
The president did not provide further details about the talks, including how progressed they are or which officials have been involved.
Iran’s foreign minister confirmed that Washington and Tehran will meet in Oman on 12 April.
Abbas Araqchi wrote on X: “It is as much an opportunity as it is a test. The ball is in America’s court.”
Last month, Trump raised the prospect of military action against Iran after its supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei publicly rejected the offer of direct talks.
In March, Trump sent a letter to Iran’s leader via an intermediary from the United Arab Emirates, setting out his willingness to negotiate.
That offer was rejected by Iran, though its leadership signaled a willingness to discuss a possible deal with the US via a third party.
Curbing Iran’s ability to build nuclear weapons has been a key foreign policy goal for the US and its allies for decades.
In recent months, Trump has repeatedly raised the prospect of negotiating a new agreement with Iran while threatening military action if one can not be reached.
Israel sees preventing its rival Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon as central to its long-term security. It has reportedly weighed up striking its production facilities in recent months.
Last year, Israel said it had hit an Iranian nuclear site in retaliation for Iran’s earlier missile attack on Israel.
Speaking at the White House, Netanyahu said: “We and the United States are both united in the goal that Iran does not ever get nuclear weapons.
“If it can be done diplomatically in a full way, the way it was done in Libya, I think that would be a good thing.”