More Bipartisan Opposition to Trump's Deal with Iran Is Building in Congress
- On Thursday, President Donald Trump returned to the White House from the G7 summit in France and posted a Truth Social rant attacking critics of his new Iran deal as "fools" and "jealous, bad people."
- Trump erupted at the G7 summit when asked to compare his agreement with former President Barack Obama's Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, claiming Obama bribed Iran with $1.7 billion on a Boeing 757.
- The agreement aims to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, end hostilities, and lift United States sanctions, while Iran receives up to $300 billion for "rehabilitation and economic development" during 60 days of negotiation.
- Skepticism persists among members of the president's own party regarding the deal, while veteran journalist John Harwood suggested Trump is "tormented by jealousy of a superior human being" regarding Obama.
- Trump has refused to disclose deal details, claiming the $300 billion will not come from the United States, as the incident sparked widespread criticism regarding his fitness for office.
71 Articles
71 Articles
US President Donald Trump has reacted furiously to criticism from Democrats regarding his deal with Iran. In a post on Truth Social, he writes that Iran “practically has nothing left” and wonders “how the ‘Domocrats’ can possibly think that Iran is better off now than months ago?” Trump: “How stupid can you be?”
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Even Democrats revolt: Schumer slams Trump's Iran deal as 'surrender'
Opposition to President Donald Trump’s Iran deal is now erupting across the political spectrum, with top Democrat Chuck Schumer denouncing the agreement as “the art of surrender.” Schumer accused Trump of giving Tehran sweeping concessions while securing almost nothing in return, warning Democrats will reject any final deal that includes billions of dollars for Iran’s reconstruction. “The Iranians took him to the cleaners,” he said. The criticis…

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