Iran’s judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei on Friday said Tehran remained open to talks with the United States but would not accept what he called policy “imposition” under threats.

“The Islamic Republic has never shied away from negotiations… but we certainly do not accept imposition,” Ejei said in a video carried by the judiciary’s Mizan Online website.

“We do not welcome war in any way; we do not want war, we do not want its continuation,” he said.

He however insisted that Iran was “absolutely not willing to abandon our principles and values in the face of this malicious enemy in order to avoid war or prevent its continuation.”

Iran and the United States held a single round of talks against the backdrop of a fragile ceasefire following nearly 40 days of war that broke out on February 28.

Talks have since stalled as the United States imposed a naval blockade on Iranian ports, while Iran has kept the strategic Strait of Hormuz largely shut, allowing only a trickle of ships through the waterway since the start of the war.