Iran Rejects Trump's Ceasefire Terms and Issues Own Demands as War Continues
- Iran has rejected the United States' proposal to end the war, finding its terms unacceptable and stating it will decide the timing to end the war itself.
- Iran has outlined five conditions to end the war, which include a halt to aggression, reparations, and control over the Strait of Hormuz.
- The United States plans to send at least 1,000 troops from the 82nd Airborne Division and about 5,000 Marines, along with sailors, to the Middle East soon.
- The US proposal reportedly includes partial sanctions relief, limits on Iran's missile program and nuclear activities, and a proposed month-long ceasefire for negotiations.
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16 Articles
Iran rejects Trump's ceasefire terms and issues own demands as war continues
Now in its fourth week, there were more diplomatic efforts on Wednesday to end the war with Iran. But airstrikes and counterstrikes continue unabated throughout the Middle East. White House correspondent Liz Landers reports.
Iran has moved on Wednesday by rejecting US President Donald Trump's 15-point proposal to end the war, as he considers its terms “excessive,” but has left a loophole to continue contacts as the mediating countries try to get, against the clock, a meeting between the representatives of the two adversaries. That meeting may, as the intermediaries warn, be the last chance to avoid a much more fierce escalation of the conflict.
Tehran, Iran. Iran rejected on Wednesday the 15-point plan proposed by the U.S. to end the war in the Middle East, reported a state media after Pakistan claimed to have transmitted the document to the Islamic Republic. Press TV, an English-language channel for foreign audiences, gave the news and was picked up by other Iranian media hours after the Iranian Navy announced that it had attacked the U.S. aircraft carrier “Abraham Lincoln,” deployed …
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