Vance Says Trump Is 'Impatient' as Iran Ceasefire Holds
Vance said Trump wants quick progress and warned the United States could restore military and economic pressure if Iran does not negotiate in good faith.
- On Wednesday, Vice President JD Vance stated in Budapest that President Donald Trump is "impatient" to make progress on the Iran war, directing his negotiating team to engage in good faith.
- Trump announced the two-week truce Tuesday evening, hours before a deadline he set for Iran to open the blockaded Strait of Hormuz, characterizing Tehran's proposal as a "workable basis" for talks.
- Vance cautioned the ceasefire, now 12 hours old, remains a "fragile truce" due to conflicting approaches within the Iranian system, warning that if leaders in Tehran "lie," the United States will resume military and economic pressure.
- Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif invited delegations from both nations to Islamabad this Friday to continue peace talks, with Vance, special envoy Steve Witkoff, and Jared Kushner expected to attend.
- While Iran's Supreme National Security Council claimed the United States accepted an "undeniable, historic, and crushing defeat," Vance emphasized that the United States retains extraordinary economic and military leverage if negotiations fail.
18 Articles
18 Articles
Vance Says Iran Truce 'Fragile'
Vice President JD Vance is not letting Tehran relax. Speaking at a conference in Hungary Wednesday, he called the two-week U.S.-Iran ceasefire fragile and warned that Trump will not hesitate to resume military action if Iran cheats. “This is why I say this is a fragile truce,” Vance said. “You have people who clearly want to come to the negotiating table and work with us to find a good deal, and then you have people who are lying about even the …
JD Vance calls U.S.-Iran ceasefire deal a ‘fragile truce’
Vice President JD Vance warned that the recently negotiated two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran was a “fragile truce,” while speaking in Hungary. “The United States agreed to stop attacking, and that not just the United States, but also our allies, have agreed to stop attacking, and that is the basis of this fragile truce that we have, which is now eight to 12 hours old,” Vance said in Budapest at the Mathias Corvinus Collegium…
Why Does Vance Call Iran Truce Fragile
Vice President JD Vance described the current Iran ceasefire as a “fragile truce,” warning that internal divisions within Tehran could undermine progress, according to his remarks in Hungary. He said some Iranian officials appear open to negotiations, while others are misrepresenting the agreement. The report by CNBC said the two-week ceasefire, announced earlier this week, has paused hostilities and eased global market tensions. Vance credited …
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