US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said that negotiations with Iran in Vienna cannot continue indefinitely, while his Kuwaiti counterpart, Sheikh Ahmed Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Sabah, affirmed the convergence of visions with the United States on regional and international issues.

"We negotiated indirectly with the Iranians in Vienna, and we showed good will and a will to return to the nuclear agreement," Blinken said in a press conference in Kuwait, stressing that negotiations with Iran cannot continue indefinitely, and the ball is now in Tehran's court.

The Wall Street Journal reported that the United States is planning to impose sanctions on Iran targeting its capabilities in the field of drones and guided missiles.

This move comes in light of Washington's fears of the risks these capabilities pose to America and the interests of its allies.

The newspaper quoted Western security officials as saying that they see Iran's ability to conduct precision strikes as a more direct threat than uranium enrichment and ballistic missiles.

The newspaper pointed out that Washington imposed sanctions on Iran's missile programs last year.

But officials say that targeting Iran's ability to supply spare parts used in the manufacture of drones and guided missiles, could be more effective.

It quoted a US official as saying that Iran's drones had become a real danger to US allies in the region.

These developments come as a continuation of the dispute between the two sides over the means of returning to the nuclear agreement

Earlier, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said that negotiations with Iran in Vienna could not continue indefinitely

"We negotiated indirectly with the Iranians in Vienna, and we showed good will and a will to return to the nuclear agreement," he said in a press conference in Kuwait, stressing that negotiations with Iran cannot continue indefinitely, and the ball is now in Tehran's court.