Tehran: Iranians reacted with a mixture of disappointment and defiance on Sunday after peace talks with the United States failed to reach an agreement following hourslong negotiations.
US officials said the talks collapsed over what they described as Iranâs refusal to commit to abandoning its nuclear program. Iranian officials blamed the US for failing to reach a deal, without specifying the sticking points.
The failure of the high-stakes talks in Pakistan after 21 hours casts doubt over the future of a fragile two-week ceasefire, due to expire on April 22.
Standing outside a newsstand in the capital, Tehran, Farhad Simia said he had hoped for successful negotiations and an end to the fighting, but stood with Iran despite the failure of the talks.
âIâm against war. I think negotiation is the better path,â Simia, 43, said. He blamed âinappropriate demandsâ by the US for the failure to reach a deal.
Mehdi Hosseini, also 43, agreed: âConsidering the advantage Iran seemed to have on the battlefield, there was a real concern that we might lose all those gains in the negotiations. âWhether the talks
succeed or not is one matter, but the fact that the Iranian negotiating team managed to preserve what it achieved in the war, while refusing to back down and surrender, gives reasonfor hope.â
The streets of Tehran were lined up with large Iranian flags and giant billboards glorifying the countryâs leaders and military achievements. One large illustration depicted Iranian men in uniform lifting a fishing net out of the sea with a catch of miniature-sized US military aircraft and warships. âThe Strait Remains Closed,â the billboard read.
Hamid Haghi, 55, said âAmericaâs overreachâ was the reason for the talksâ failure. The US wants âto come to the Strait of Hormuz, which is a legacy from our fathers,â he said. âWe can oversee (it) ourselves.â
Like many Iranians, 60-year-old Mohammad Bagher believes Iran should continue to stand strong against the US in what he sees as a war of their own making.
âWe are a nation of dialogue and negotiation as long as our interests are respected. We have never sought war,â he said. âWe will stand firm to the end, we are ready to sacrifice our lives, and will not give them one inch of our land.â
Since the US and Israel launched the war on Feb 28, it has killed at least 3,000 people in Iran, 2,020 in Lebanon, 23 in Israel and more than a dozen in Gulf Arab states, and caused lasting damage to infrastructure in half a dozen Middle Eastern countries.
Iranâs grip on the Strait of Hormuz has largely cut off the Persian Gulf and its oil and gas exports from the global economy, sending energy prices soaring.