Foreign Ministry cites Washington’s hostile and hypocritical moves against Iran

Iran won't negotiate under pressure, Tehran tells US

February 13, 2025 - 12:57

TEHRAN - On Wednesday night, the Iranian Foreign Ministry released a fact sheet featuring the United States long list of historically hostile actions towards the Islamic Republic and denounced Washington’s hypocritical approach towards the country, Press TV reported.

The ministry released the fact sheet, which included a whole host of US violations concerning Iran, such as reinstatement of its so-called “maximum pressure” policy towards the Islamic Republic.

The U.S. initiated the policy under Donald Trump’s first term as president and relaunched it under his current leadership by signing a new “Presidential National Security Memorandum” on February 3, through which he ordered intensification of economic and political pressure against the Islamic Republic.

The ministry described the policy as an extension of Washington’s long-standing adversarial attitude towards Tehran.

It, meanwhile, asserted that “maximum pressure” was never truly halted after Trump’s former term ended, as the Joe Biden administration not only retained the sanctions against Iran, but also imposed hundreds more.

The ministry reiterated the Islamic Republic’s commitment to resisting such coercive measures, emphasizing that no nation should be subjected to illegal and unjust economic pressure.

‘Dual approach exposes U.S. hypocrisy’

The U.S. was deploying the policy, while simultaneously calling for negotiations with Iran on the nuclear issue, the ministry said, noting that such attitude contradicted Washington’s rhetoric.

Iran underlines that it has always supported diplomacy and engaged in negotiations in good faith. However, it reminds at the same time that pressure and intimidation tactics have never yielded results as far as dealing with the Islamic Republic is concerned.

Iranian authorities, meanwhile, warn that such contradictory approach only deepens distrust and undermines any possibility of meaningful diplomatic engagement.

U.S. breach of nuclear deal

The fact sheet further highlighted the United States track record regarding the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), an agreement endorsed by the United Nations Security Council, which was signed between Iran and world countries, including the U.S., in 2015.

Tehran remains open to diplomacy that safeguards its national interests.The former Trump administration withdrew from the deal in 2018 in a unilateral and illegal move despite its endorsement by the UN Security Council. It then returned the sanctions that had been lifted under the accord and ramped up even more economic pressure on the Islamic Republic.

Washington's departure came despite Iran’s full compliance with the agreement as confirmed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the document highlighted.

“Over the past four years, despite intensive negotiations to revive the JCPOA, Washington, while expressing a desire to return to the agreement, was never willing to fulfill its JCPOA commitments or lift sanctions against the Iranian nation, and under various pretexts, it prevented, on different occasions, the negotiations from reaching a final conclusion,” it added.

Historical U.S. hostility towards Iran

The document also recalled the long history of other aggressive American actions against Iran, dating back to the CIA-orchestrated 1953 coup.

It listed numerous examples, including Washington’s military support and other instances of backing for former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein during his war on Iran in the 1980s, freezing of Iranian assets, and military provocations.

It also reminded that Washington ordered the assassination of Lieutenant General Qassem Soleimani, Iran’s top anti-terror commander and a strongly revered national and regional personality, in January 2020, and  facilitating the targeting of Iranian nuclear scientists by the Israeli regime -- which has so far assassinated at least seven of the scientists.

Washington’s role in regional instability

Additionally, the fact sheet challenged U.S. allegations that Iran supported “terrorism,” asserting that the Islamic Republic was, in fact, the primary victim of terrorism in the region.

It pointed to the sacrifices that had been made by Iranian servicemen in the fight against the Daesh terrorist group and other similar outfits in the region .

Meanwhile, the ministry reiterated its condemnation of the U.S. for fueling regional instability by backing groups like Daesh, al-Qaeda, and al-Nusra Front, currently Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, to serve its geopolitical interests.

The Foreign Ministry reaffirms Iran has never pursued nuclear arms by sticking to the binding religious decree issued by Ayatollah KhameneiFurthermore, the statement argued that Washington would try to brand Iran’s continued support for regional resistance movements, which fight against deadly Israeli occupation and aggression, as fostering “terrorism” as a pretext to shield the Israeli regime from accountability for its atrocities against the regional peoples, including members of the resistance factions.

“Labeling Iran's support for resistance groups and Muslim nations in the region - who are fighting for the liberation of their land and human dignity against an occupying regime - as 'support for terrorism' does not change the reality,” it underlined.

“Blaming the Islamic Republic of Iran is a futile U.S. attempt to protect the Zionist regime from accountability and to evade from U.S. responsibility for full-fledged and absolute support for the crimes of this regime,” it added, pointing to Washington’s all-out political, military, and intelligence support for Tel Aviv’s military aggression.

U.S. human rights violations, economic warfare

The ministry also condemned Washington’s claims of championing human rights, highlighting its full support for Israeli atrocities in the Gaza Strip and the devastation that had been caused by economic sanctions on the Iranian people.

It reminded that during the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. even intensified its sanctions, worsening humanitarian conditions in Iran, and asserted that the American policies directly targeted the Iranian people, contradicting Washington’s self-proclaimed concern for human rights.

Iran’s response: Diplomacy with strength, dignity

Amid the American attitude, Iran’s leadership, guided by the principles of “dignity, wisdom, and expediency,” would refuse to negotiate under pressure, the document underscored.

Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei has reiterated that engaging in talks under coercion was irrational and would undermine Iran’s sovereignty.

Tehran, however, remains open to diplomacy that safeguards its national interests.

While committed to diplomatic solutions, Iran warns that any aggression against its national security would be met with a decisive response, the ministry stressed, pledging to continue pursuing the Islamic Republic’s interests from a position of strength, and ensuring that the country’s sovereignty and regional stability remained non-negotiable.

The ministry finally reaffirmed that Iran has never pursued acquiring nuclear weapons, citing a binding religious decree (fatwa) against such prospect that had been issued by the Leader.

It called on the U.S., as the only country that has ever used nuclear weapons, to refrain from using the nuclear issue as an excuse for confrontation.

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