BBC â Donald Trump says he has told Iran it has to do âtwo thingsâ to avoid military action, as the US builds up its forces in the Gulf.
âNumber one, no nuclear. And number two, stop killing protesters,â the US president said, adding that âthey are killing them by the thousandsâ.
âWe have a lot of very big, very powerful ships sailing to Iran right now, and it would be great if we didnât have to use them.â
His latest remarks follow weeks of pressure on Iran to negotiate a deal on its nuclear programme.
Iranâs Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has said armed forces were ready âwith their fingers on the triggerâ to âimmediately and powerfully respondâ to any aggression.
âThe aim here is that Iran shouldnât be able to develop nuclear weapons. Thatâs hugely important,â Starmer said while on a visit to China.
âAnd of course we need to deal with the fact that they are repressing protesters, killing protesters. Itâs grotesque what is happening. And so thatâs where our focus is and weâre working with allies to that end.â
Araghchi, meanwhile, was in Istanbul on Friday for talks focused on averting the threat of US military action.
He said Iran was ready for talks with the US âif these negotiations are based on mutual interest, mutual respect and mutual trustâ during a news conference with Turkeyâs Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan.
But he added that Iranâs missile defence systems would ânever be the subjectâ of talks and reiterated his governmentâs claim that Iranâs nuclear programme is entirely peaceful.
Fidan said Turkey was âready to support any peaceful solutions to the problemsâ.
Earlier on, President Recep Tayyip Erdoganâs office said he had told his Iranian counterpart Masoud Pezeshkian in a phone call that Turkey was willing to help âde-escalateâ tensions between Iran and the US.
Trump made his latest comments at the premiere of a documentary about his wife Melania. Earlier this week, he wrote on Truth Social: âHopefully Iran will quickly âCome to the Tableâ and negotiate a fair and equitable deal â NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS.â
He warned that a âmassive Armada is heading to Iranâ, and it was âready, willing, and able to rapidly fulfil its mission, with speed and violence, if necessaryâ.
In response, Araghchi said: âIran has always welcomed a mutually beneficial, fair and equitable NUCLEAR DEAL â on equal footing, and free from coercion, threats, and intimidation â which ensures Iranâs rights to PEACEFUL nuclear technology, and guarantees NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS.â
âSuch weapons have no place in our security calculations and we have NEVER sought to acquire them,â he added.
Demonstrations began in late December after a sharp fall in the value of the Iranian currency, but swiftly evolved into a crisis of legitimacy for the countryâs clerical leadership.
Tehran locals told the BBC that the crackdown on protestors was unlike anything that they had witnessed before.
Though Trump initially promised that âhelp is on the wayâ, he later said that he had been told on good authority that the execution of demonstrators had stopped.
The US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (Hrana) says it has so far confirmed the killing of at least 6,479 people since the unrest began, including 6,092 protesters, 118 children and 214 people affiliated with the government.
It is also investigating approximately 17,000 more reported deaths.
Iranian authorities said last week that more than 3,100 people had been killed, but that the majority were security personnel or bystanders attacked by âriotersâ.
The European Union has since added Iranâs Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to its terrorist list, in addition to placing new sanctions on six entities and 15 individuals in Iran.
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