Rubio said technical negotiations regarding the Iran deal will continue early next week

¬ U.S. media: The U.S. will work alongside International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors to locate Iran's enriched uranium

¬ Trump: Iran has assured the U.S. it will not charge any fees for vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz

¬ Iran Deputy Foreign Minister: Access for the IAEA to Iranian nuclear facilities will be resolved only based on the final Iran-U.S. agreement

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U.S. Secretary of State Rubio stated that technical team talks concerning the Iran agreement will continue early next week.

Rubio told reporters: "The technical teams will return on June 29th or 30th. They are divided into several working groups according to different issues. If I'm not mistaken, they will return to Switzerland."

Rubio added that he would not personally attend the negotiations.

Rubio said: "At the technical level, personnel from the Department of State, the Department of Energy, and other agencies will participate."

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According to a report by Fox News following an interview with President Trump, Trump said U.S. experts will accompany IAEA inspectors in searching for Iran’s enriched uranium.

The Fox News reporter stated during the segment: "President Trump said the inspectors are not in a rush to arrive in Iran, but he mentioned that U.S. inspectors will go there together with the IAEA when they finally head to Iran, jointly searching for highly enriched uranium buried deep underground."

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President Trump of the United States stated that the U.S. has received assurances from Iran that it will not impose any fees on ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz.

Trump wrote on the social media platform "Truth Social": "Iran has informed the U.S. that, contrary to false and destructive reports in the media, Iran will neither impose nor collect any taxes, insurance fees, or other types of charges on vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz."

Trump added: "If this turns out to be false information, negotiations will immediately halt!"

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Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Gharib-Abaadi stated that access for the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to Iranian nuclear facilities targeted in attacks will be resolved solely based on the final agreement with the United States.

On June 23, President Trump stated that he is not in a hurry to allow IAEA personnel to enter Iran to begin inspections; they will go there at an appropriate time.

Gharib-Abaadi posted on the social media platform X: "There is no plan to allow the IAEA to enter (Iran — editor's note) attacked facilities or nuclear materials. These issues will only be addressed and discussed within the framework of the final agreement and based on tangible actions taken by the other party to lift all sanctions."

Meanwhile, Iran's Foreign Ministry previously indicated that the IAEA can still access the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant.

After the U.S. attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities in June 2025, Iran restricted its cooperation with the IAEA and limited the agency’s access to its nuclear facilities.

Source: sputniknews

Original: toutiao.com/article/1868914507287560/

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