Trump Says There Are ‘No Limits’ to His Power
The interim deal starts a 60-day negotiating clock and lifts the naval blockade as officials say talks will decide Iran’s nuclear limits.
- On Wednesday, June 17, 2026, President Donald Trump signed a 14-point Memorandum of Understanding with Iran at the Palace of Versailles, establishing a 60-day negotiation window and immediately reopening the Strait of Hormuz.
- Rising conflict disrupted global fuel supplies, costing American consumers nearly $60 billion, prompting Trump to negotiate the agreement to prevent a global economic depression.
- Financed by regional partners, the agreement includes a $300 billion reconstruction fund for Iran and initiates sanctions waivers allowing oil exports while nuclear negotiations continue.
- Trump insisted the outcome amounts to Iran's "unconditional surrender," though former national security adviser Susan Rice called it a "jaw-dropping, horrific surrender document" citing financial concessions.
- Negotiators face a mid-August deadline for a final accord, coinciding with midterm election campaigning, while decades of mutual distrust since the 1953 removal of the Iranian government complicate diplomatic efforts.
119 Articles
119 Articles
Trump's Fears About Economy Undercut US Leverage in Iran Talks
(Bloomberg) — President Donald Trump said the prospect of global economic collapse was a big reason he signed an interim peace deal with Iran. That admission exposes a key US weakness heading into the next round of talks with Tehran.
Trump says Iran deal 'probably is unconditional surrender,' reveals details of covert maritime operation – Democratic Accent
President Donald Trump is revealing new details surrounding the United States’ negotiations with Iran just days after both countries signed a memorandum of understanding calling for the war to end. In an interview with Axios’ Marc Caputo published Thursday, Trump weighed in on the 14-point MOU between the two countries and pushed back on claims that the agreement is not the same as an unconditional surrender from Iran. “Well, it really probabl…
Trump’s new Iran deal faces nuclear blind spot over uranium stockpile, experts warn
Nuclear experts are warning that Trump’s new Iran framework could leave Tehran with too much control over its uranium stockpile unless inspectors first fully account for and secure the material.
Trump raises pressure on Iran in public speech aboard new presidential plane, warning that he could resume military operations against Iran if an agreement is not reached within 60 days, and as a result, oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz could resume
– We have 60 days. We have to make a deal, otherwise we will do things that will not make them happy, says Trump. The statement comes after the US and Iran opened for new negotiations on Tehran's nuclear program and the security of the Strait of Hormuz - one of the world's most important oil transportation routes. At the same time, Trump boasted about the US military's previous operations against Iran.

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