Bloomberg reported, today, Friday, that informed sources expected that efforts to revive the nuclear agreement will continue beyond the deadline set by the Atomic Energy Agency this month, and that negotiations may resume in Doha after US President Joe Biden’s visit to the region this month, while an official confirmed Iranian that his country will not abandon the negotiations.

And Bloomberg quoted two European diplomats directly familiar with the negotiations as saying that while negotiations between Washington and Tehran have not progressed, efforts to revive the agreement are expected to continue beyond the July deadline proposed by the International Atomic Energy Agency of the United Nations. United.

A third diplomat familiar with the matter told Bloomberg that efforts may resume in Doha after Biden's visit to the region.

On the other hand, a senior Iranian official told Al Jazeera that Tehran has not and will not leave the negotiating table, accusing Washington of being the one who left the nuclear agreement and obstructed its implementation.

He added that the negotiations in Doha will continue, and that it is a continuation of the Vienna process, and its goal is to resolve the remaining differences in an innovative and rapid manner.

The Iranian official considered that an acceptable agreement could be reached within days, provided Washington was realistic in dealing with the lifting of sanctions.

The Iranian news agency quoted Iran's ambassador to the United Nations, Majid Takht Ravanchi, as saying yesterday that Tehran acted seriously in the Doha talks, and confirmed that his country would be in contact with the European Union coordinator for the next round of talks.

The ambassador stated that Tehran had asked the United States for "objective and verifiable guarantees," and said that once the other parties fulfilled all their obligations in a full and effective manner, his country would immediately reverse all steps it took after Washington withdrew from the 2015 agreement.