20.06.2025 18:11
Iran and senior officials from Germany, France, and the United Kingdom gathered in Geneva, Switzerland. The meeting is expected to address Iran's nuclear program and the conflicts that have arisen from Israel's attacks on Iran.
As the conflicts between Israel and Iran continue, a high-level meeting between Iran and Germany, France, and the United Kingdom has begun in Geneva.
While the conflicts that started with Israel's attacks on Iran are intensifying, diplomatic traffic is also ongoing.
CRITICAL SUMMIT IN GENEVA
A critical meeting took place today in the diplomatic traffic. High-level officials from Iran, Germany, France, and the United Kingdom came together.
The meeting, which started at a hotel in Geneva, Switzerland, was attended by Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul, British Foreign Minister David Lammy, French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot, European Union (EU) High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Kaja Kallas, and their accompanying delegations.
In the meeting, which attracted significant interest from the international press, it is expected that Iran's nuclear program and the conflicts that began with Israel's attacks on Iran will be addressed.
WHAT HAPPENED?
Before the meeting, Iranian Foreign Minister Araghchi spoke to Iranian state television in Tehran, stating, "We see the U.S. as an accomplice and partner of Israel in its attacks on Iran. While the Zionist regime's attacks continue, the U.S. is requesting negotiations and has sent messages several times. As long as the attacks do not stop, negotiations cannot be on the table."
French President Emmanuel Macron stated that his country's Foreign Minister Barrot would meet with European and Iranian counterparts in Geneva, and that a diplomatic and technical negotiation proposal regarding Iran's nuclear program would be conveyed during the meeting.
German Minister Wadephul, in a statement to MDR radio before the meeting with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in Geneva, expressed, "I am very pleased to conduct these discussions in Geneva with my counterparts, and I hope we will be successful. Because diplomatic discussions are always better than military conflicts."