US President Donald Trump is considering military options after US officials dismissed Iran's revised nuclear proposal as inadequate, Axios reported Monday, citing a senior US official.
Through Pakistani mediators, Tehran delivered a new proposal Sunday night, but it included only minor changes and still rejected major nuclear demands, according to the sources.
On Tuesday, Trump will gather top national security officials in the Situation Room as the White House weighs possible military responses amid stalled negotiations, according to two US officials.
Before Washington received the latest proposal, Trump told Axios on Sunday that "the clock is ticking" and warned Iran that "they are going to get hit much harder" if it does not show flexibility.
The revised proposal expanded Iran's pledge not to pursue nuclear weapons, but Tehran still avoided firm commitments on stopping uranium enrichment or giving up its highly enriched uranium reserves, according to a senior US official.
Despite Iranian media reports suggesting Washington may ease oil sanctions, a senior US official told Axios the US will not provide sanctions relief "for free" without reciprocal Iranian action.
"We are really not making a lot of progress," the senior US official said, adding that if talks fail, "we will have a conversation through bombs."
Rather than holding direct negotiations on a final agreement, Washington and Tehran are using indirect discussions to shape the structure and scope of future nuclear talks, the official said.
US officials believe Iran submitted another counterproposal because Tehran fears US military strikes if negotiations collapse, the report added.
Pakistani Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi returned to Islamabad on Monday after spending three days in Tehran as part of mediation efforts between Washington and Tehran.
Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said Qatar, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey are participating in mediation efforts and urged Washington and Tehran to reach common ground and end the conflict, according to the report.
The White House didn't immediately respond to' request for comment.
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