Tehran preparing for new round of talks with IAEA, Iran’s nuclear chief says
Iran's Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant
Inspectors have completed a brief visit to Bushehr, as Tehran readies for another round of negotiations with the International Atomic Energy Agency, Iran’s atomic energy chief said on Sunday.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian told a summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization in Tianjin that members must expand trade in national currencies and strengthen financial mechanisms to withstand sanctions.
Addressing the gathering on Monday, Pezeshkian outlined a three-part proposal called the “Special Accounts and Settlements of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.”
The plan proposes to expand the use of national currencies in trade, develop shared digital systems including central bank digital currencies, and create a multilateral swap fund to support members facing sanctions or liquidity crises.
“This initiative will enhance economic resilience and turn the SCO into a model of a fair multipolar financial order,” he said.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian speaks during the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Summit 2025, in Tianjin, China, September 1, 2025.
This was not the first time Pezeshkian stressed de-dollarization. At a BRICS meeting in Russia in 2024, he said the bloc was recognized for “challenging the dominance of the dollar” and promoting national currencies.
At that time, an image of a banknote bearing the BRICS emblem in the hands of Russian President Vladimir Putin at the organization’s summit in Tatarstan drew media attention and sparked discussion about the possibility of its members adopting a common currency.
In December 2024, before officially taking office as US President Donald Trump warned BRICS members that if they used any currency other than the US dollar, they would face a 100% tariff.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian speaks during the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Summit 2025, in Tianjin, China, September 1, 2025.
Absent from leaders’ photo
A video released Sunday showed Pezeshkian missing from the customary group photo.
Iranian media said he arrived late, while his deputy for communications said the official summit was to begin the following day and the photo was taken during an informal banquet. Unofficial Iranian accounts said his absence was due to alcohol being served at the reception, an issue sensitive for Iranian officials.
Founded in 2001 by China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) initially focused on regional security and counterterrorism.
Over time, China and Russia have framed it as a counterweight to US and NATO influence. The SCO now has 10 full members—including India, Pakistan, Iran (since 2023), and Belarus (since 2024)—and its agenda has expanded to economic, political, and military cooperation.
Yale University will offer a new seminar on US-Iran relations this fall taught by former US Iran envoy Robert Malley, with required readings that include works by former Islamic Republic officials, according to a course syllabus seen by Iran International.
Malley served as US special envoy for Iran under President Joe Biden and was a key architect of the Obama-era nuclear deal with Iran. He was placed on leave and had his security clearance suspended in 2023 over alleged mishandling of classified information.
His Yale course for Fall 2025, titled Adversaries by Design: Deconstructing the Iran-US Relationship, will examine ties between Washington and Tehran from the 1979 Islamic Revolution to the present.
The syllabus, seen by Iran International, says students are expected to “internalize” both American and Iranian perspectives, and assignments include role-playing exercises simulating negotiations between the two governments.
However, the list of people whose works students are required to read mainly consists of former Islamic Republic officials or analysts aligned with their thinking.
The syllabus’s reading list includes “How Iran Sees the Path to Peace,” a December 2024 Foreign Affairs essay by former foreign minister Mohammad-Javad Zarif, who has been under US sanctions since 2019. The article, assigned for the Week 11, outlines his diplomatic perspective on Iran’s relations with the West.
While Yale’s website says the course will feature guest speakers, it does not identify them. However, an op-ed by a Yale student published Friday in the Jewish News Syndicate names Zarif as one of the invited speakers.
FILE PHOTO: US Secretary of State John Kerry (bottom left), US National Security Council member Rob Malley (top left), Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi (top right), Head of Iran Atomic Energy Organization Ali Akbar Salehi, and Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif (bottom right) wait to start a meeting at the Beau Rivage Palace Hotel in Lausanne March 29, 2015.
The syllabus also assigns a 2019 Foreign Affairs article by Hossein Mousavian, a former Iranian nuclear negotiator and diplomat. The piece, “How Iran Sees its Standoff with the United States,” appears in the Week 8 readings on the collapse of the 2015 nuclear deal.
Mousavian recently ended his 15-year tenure at Princeton University, which the university described as a retirement. Activists, however, said it followed pressure over his alleged ties to state-linked assassinations and propaganda efforts especially when he served as Iran's ambassador to Berlin.
Other authors featured on the reading list include Narges Bajoghli, Vali Nasr, Djavad Salehi-Isfahani, Ali Vaez, Esfandyar Batmanghelidj, and Trita Parsi who are mostly opposed to Iran sanctions and favor normalized relations.
Their works, assigned in weeks dedicated to sanctions and diplomacy, argue that US sanctions have been ineffective or harmful to ordinary Iranians and explore possible diplomatic paths forward.
One of the required reading texts is How Sanctions Work: Iran and the Impact of Economic Warfare by Bajoghli, Nasr, Salehi-Isfahani, and Vaez, alongside Batmanghelidj’s How Sanctions Hurt Iran’s Protesters and Parsi’s No, Sanctions Didn’t Force Iran to Make a Deal.
In 2023, Iran International and Semafor investigation uncovered the Iran Experts Initiative (IEI) - a network formed under Zarif to promote Iran's foreign policy and nuclear strategy through scholars based abroad. Ali Vaez was named as one of its key members.
Former Iranian President Hassan Rouhani on Sunday said that reducing tensions with the United States through negotiations was a matter of national interest.
“Relations with Europe, our neighbors, and the East and the West, even tension with the US, if we can reduce it, if it is in our national interest, what is wrong with that? Not only is it not wrong, but it is also our duty and obligation,” Iranian media quoted Rouhani as saying in a meeting with his advisers on Sunday.
“We must strengthen our relations with the world. Whoever is ready to negotiate, if we see that negotiation benefits the country, our national interests and national security, then we should talk,” he added.
Rouhani, who served as president when Iran signed the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, had described negotiations with the US as “necessary and obligatory” in an earlier meeting with his advisers on August 14.
His remarks come after Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei rejected calls by Tehran moderates for direct negotiations with the United States, insisting that Washington’s hostility cannot be resolved through talks.
“Those who say, ‘Why don’t you negotiate directly with the United States and solve the issues,’ are superficial; because the reality is different," Khamenei said during a meeting with his supporters in Tehran.
"Given America’s true objective in its hostility toward Iran, these issues are unsolvable."
Iran and the United States concluded five rounds of mostly indirect talks in May this year.
A sixth round was scheduled to take place on June 15 in Oman. However, it was suspended after Israeli airstrikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities on June 13, prompting Tehran to declare the talks "meaningless" and cancel the session.
On June 22, the US carried out airstrikes on Iran’s key nuclear sites at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan. A US-brokered ceasefire came into effect on June 24, which ended the 12-day air war.
President Trump told reporters in mid-July that the urgency to engage with Iran had vanished after US strikes.
Earlier, Iran International reported that Washington ignored at least 15 messages from Iran seeking renewed negotiations.
Iran said the Israeli airstrike that killed Houthi Prime Minister Ahmad Ghaleb al-Rahwi and several cabinet members in Sanaa would draw a response from its regional allies, calling the attack a war crime aimed at silencing Yemen’s support for Gaza.
Israel aimed to suppress Yemen’s support for Palestinians by targeting its leadership, Iran's Revolutionary Guards said in a statement on Sunday.
“This crime will not weaken the Yemeni people,” the statement said. “It will fuel greater anger and broaden the front of resistance.”
“This savage crime will not weaken the determination of the Yemeni people,” the statement said. “It will ignite greater anger and expand the geography of resistance.”
The Guards described the attack as a “war crime against humanity” and said Israel carried it out “with full US support and the silence of international institutions.”
'Yemen has shaken Israel and the US'
Judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei said the assassination of al-Rahwi and his ministers was a sign of Israel’s failure to defeat Yemen militarily. “Yemenis have exhausted both the Zionist regime and its American patron,” he said in a message of condolence.
Ejei praised the Yemeni leadership’s support for Gaza and said that in the face of international silence, their resistance had changed the balance of power in the region.
Pezeshkian urges international response
President Masoud Pezeshkian also condemned the strike, calling it a terrorist act that highlighted “the criminal nature of the ruling clique in occupied Palestine.”
In a statement addressed to the people of Yemen and the broader Muslim world, Pezeshkian said, “The international community must act urgently to stop this regime’s lawlessness, which now poses the greatest threat to peace, justice, and humanity.”
Al-Rahwi was killed in an Israeli airstrike on Sanaa earlier this week, alongside several ministers, while they were holding a cabinet meeting. Israeli officials said the operation targeted senior Houthi political and military figures in response to attacks on Israel, including the use of cluster munitions.
The Houthis have vowed to continue their campaign against Israel and have appointed a new acting prime minister.
The group has targeted international shipping in the Red Sea, Bab al-Mandab, and Gulf of Aden since the Gaza war began, with some attacks reaching the Indian Ocean. The group has also launched missiles and drones at Israel, describing the strikes as support for Palestinians.
The US says it recently secured a halt to attacks on its vessels, but the Houthis say the pause does not apply to Israel and have pledged to continue those operations.
Iran expelled more than 1.8 million undocumented migrants who are mainly Afghans over the past year, an interior ministry official said on Sunday, adding that at least 800,000 more must leave under the government’s removal plan.
The program began with classifying migrants into legal and illegal groups to provide services to the former and facilitate the return of the latter, Nader Yarahmadi, Head of the Interior Ministry’s Center for Foreign Nationals and Migrants.
“From the total 1,833,636 undocumented migrants who left, 1.2 million departures occurred this year alone,” Yarahmadi said.
“More than 70 percent of these undocumented migrants went back home with their families,” he said.
Yarahmadi added that the expulsions are not over. “At least 800,000 more people must be removed as undocumented migrants, which is on the agenda in the next phases,” he said.
Crackdown after ceasefire with Israel
Iran launched a sweeping crackdown on Afghan migrants in the wake of a ceasefire with Israel, targeting them for deportation and alleged security threats.
Taliban authorities have warned of a looming humanitarian crisis in western Afghanistan due to the rapid influx.
Over the decades, Afghan migrants have been treated as expendable tools in Tehran’s shifting policies in the region. They were recruited to fight in Syria as part of the Fatemiyoun Brigade, exploited as cheap undocumented labor inside Iran, and periodically threatened with mass expulsion in bouts of official populism. During moments of domestic discontent, Afghan migrants became convenient targets to deflect public anger.
Following the Taliban’s return to power in 2021, a massive influx of Afghan refugees entered Iran and as many as two million Afghans crossed the border within two years.
Officials insist the expulsions will continue until the number of foreign residents matches what they describe as the country’s designed capacity.
Two rounds of talks between the IAEA and the foreign ministry had already taken place, with a third session planned, Mohammad Eslami, head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, told reporters.
“The matter of IAEA supervision over the refueling of Bushehr was on the agenda. Two inspectors came, observed the process and left,” he said.
Inspectors entered the country with authorization from the Supreme National Security Council to oversee a fuel replacement process at Bushehr, he added.
The visit marked the first IAEA presence since Tehran suspended cooperation during the 12-day war with Israel, when US and Israeli strikes targeted Iranian nuclear facilities.
IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi said last week that while inspectors were allowed back into Bushehr, access to other key sites remained blocked. He also warned that the agency was still dissatisfied with the level of Iranian cooperation.
IAEA Director Rafael Grossi at the annual meeting of the Institute of Nuclear Materials Management is in Washington DC, August 26
Some Iranian officials and media outlets had also threatened that as soon as Grossi entered Iranian territory, he should be arrested and put on trial. The Kayhan newspaper, overseen by the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, had called for Grossi to be tried and executed “for spying for Mossad.”
Dispute over snapback sanctions
Eslami dismissed the activation of the UN snapback mechanism by Britain, France and Germany as unsurprising. “Our enemies always find excuses to pressure the Iranian nation,” he said, accusing the IAEA leadership of acting under the influence of Western powers.
The European states triggered the mechanism on August 28, seeking the reimposition of all previous UN sanctions and demanding that Iran resume full cooperation with the IAEA within 30 days. Tehran has so far refused.
Officials have threatened that if pressure intensifies, Iran could withdraw from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty — a move that would deepen its isolation and risk losing support from Russia and China.
The IAEA has reported that Iran holds enriched uranium stocks far beyond the limits set in the 2015 nuclear deal, including more than 400 kilograms enriched to 60 percent.
The fate of this material remains unclear after the strikes on Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan during the June conflict. Experts warn it could be enough, if further refined, to build several nuclear weapons.