Tehran: Iran is ready to sit down and discuss their nuclear program with Western countries, but only if they show that they are “serious”, a spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs was listed on Thursday. “We said several times that we were ready for discussions, but only then,” Esmaeil Baqaei said. Tehran recently signaled countless time west of the willingness to reach an agreement on his nuclear program. In an interview with Sky News published on Tuesday, published on its official ABBAS ARAGHCHI telegram channel, he said that the new US administration should work to gain confidence in Tehran if he wants a new round of nuclear interviews. In a Thursday interview in Baqaei, he expressed hope that the new US President Donald Trump would accept a “realistic approach” to Iran. During his first term, which ended in 2021, Trump watched the “maximum pressure” policy and withdrew the United States from an agreement on an important point that imposed curbs on the Iranian nuclear program in exchange for relief from sanctions. Asked about the possibility of new interviews, Baqaei was quoted on Thursday, because Iranian policy will depend on “negotiations of other parties”. Tehran complied with the agreement – known as a common complex action plan (JCPO) – until the year after the withdrawal of Washington in 2018, but then began his duties. Since then, the efforts to revitalize the 2015 nuclear pact have been chilled. Iran has repeatedly expressed his willingness to revive the nuclear agreement and President Masoud Pezeshkian, who joined the office last July, called for the isolation of his country. Before the return of Trump to the White House, Iranian officials organized nuclear interviews with counterparts from Britain, France and Germany, which both sides described as “sincere and constructive”. In December, three Western governments accused Teherán of growing their reserves of highly enriched uranium at a “unprecedented” without “any trusted civilian justification” and discussed the possible re -connection of sanctions. On Thursday, Baqaei warned that if this happened, Iranian compliance with the failure to meet the nuclear agent “would no longer have any meaning”. Within the NPT, signatory states are obliged to declare their nuclear shares and place them under the supervision of an international atomic energy agency (IAEA).