Monitoring Desk
TEHRAN: Iran insisted on Monday that it had reached a prisoner exchange deal with arch-rival the United States, a day after Washington denied the claim as “an especially cruel lie.”
Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani said “a written agreement exists on the issue of US prisoners” and that it could be implemented if the American side takes a “realistic approach.”
Three US citizens are among at least 16 Western passport holders now detained in Iran on various charges. Most hold dual nationality, which Iran does not recognize.
The United States and Iran do not engage in direct negotiations but communicate through mediators.
Kanani said such talks had led to an agreement a year ago, speaking in his weekly press conference in Tehran.
“In March 2022, a written agreement was reached in this regard, which was also signed by the official representative of the US government,” he said.
He blamed a “technical problem on the American side” and US domestic politics and “political campaigns” for a delay in implementing the deal.
Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian first made a claim on a deal on Sunday.
US denies prisoners swap deal with Iran
State Department spokesman Ned Price quickly denied the comments on the US prisoners as “another especially cruel lie that only adds to the suffering of their families.”
“We are working hard to secure the release of the three wrongfully detained US nationals in Iran,” Price added.
The Iranian spokesman Monday also discussed the fate of six French nationals being held in Iranian prisons.
“I hope we will see good things happening regarding this issue,” Kanani said.
He cautioned, however, that what he called France’s continued “interventionist role” in Iran’s internal affairs would only frustrate efforts to secure their release.
“The French government has adopted a non-constructive position and played an interventionist role concerning the recent internal developments of Iran,” the diplomat said.
Kanani was referring to French comments on the protest movement that broke out after the September 16 death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, an ethnic Kurd who had been detained over an alleged violation of strict dress rules for women.
Hundreds of people, including dozens of security forces, were killed and thousands arrested during the protests that Iranian officials generally described as “riots” and blamed on hostile forces linked to the United States, Israel, and their allies.