On August 7, a high-level U.S. delegation led by Deputy Secretary of State William J. Burns (left) met with Iranian officials in Geneva. It was the first meeting of officials from the two sides since the world’s six major powers and Iran failed to produce a final nuclear agreement in mid-July. “These bilateral consultations will take place in the context of the P5+1 nuclear negotiations led by E.U. High Representative Cathy Ashton,” according to a State Department media note released late on August 6. After the meeting, Iran's deputy foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said the talks were "good and useful." But another deputy foreign minister, Majid Takht-Ravanchi, warned that Iran won't cut its centrifuge capacity down to a "toy enrichment" program. The following is a list of U.S. officials who participated in the consultations and tweets on the talks by Iran's quasi-official nuclear program website.
#Iran's DepFM @Araghchi says he had "good & useful" discussions with #US undersecretary Burns in Geneva. #IranTalks RT @GhorbaniSadegh
— Iran Nuclear Energy (@nuclearenergyir) August 7, 2014
Returning from bilateral nuclear talks w US delegation in Geneva, Deputy FM Takht-Ravanchi says #Iran won't seek agreement "at any cost".
— Iran Nuclear Energy (@nuclearenergyir) August 10, 2014
In apparent ref to #US demand that #Iran cut centrifuge capacity, Deputy FM Takht-Ravanchi says "Iran won't accept 'toy' enrichment program"
— Iran Nuclear Energy (@nuclearenergyir) August 10, 2014