WAR ON IRAN
4 min read
Trump claims 'great' Iran deal will be signed in Europe, but Iran says decision not yet final
Trump cancels planned strikes against Iran and says a deal to end US-Israeli war on Iran could be signed as soon as this weekend. But Tehran says nothing has been finalised yet.
Trump claims 'great' Iran deal will be signed in Europe, but Iran says decision not yet final
An Iranian woman walks next to an anti-US mural on a street in Tehran. / Reuters

President Donald Trump has announced a "great settlement" to end the US-Israeli war on Iran, saying he expected a deal to be signed in Europe as soon as this weekend.

Trump — who is hosting a cage fight Sunday at the White House on his 80th birthday — said on Thursday that Vice President JD Vance would represent Washington.

The US leader's claim came just hours after he promised fresh attacks against Iran, before calling them off. There was no confirmation from Iran, and Trump revealed few concrete details about what each side had agreed to.

"We just made a great settlement of the war with Iran," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.

The two sides would, "subject to finalisation of documents, which should get done over the next few days, probably have a signing, maybe in Europe. It's a great thing."

But Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said Tehran has not yet made a final decision on a possible agreement with the US and will not compromise on its "red lines" in negotiations.

Baghaei said reports regarding a time and place of signing the agreement remained speculative and that nothing had been finalised.

He added that a large part of the negotiating text had been finalised but the US repeatedly changed its positions during the talks.

The Tasnim news agency noted that Trump had announced a deal was imminent 38 times in the previous two months.

"Until Iran announces the matter of a potential understanding, any news from Trump on this subject should be regarded the same as his previous messaging," it warned.

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'Happy'

Trump said he believed Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei had personally approved the deal, adding that Iran had agreed because they had "taken a pounding."

Iran would agree to never have or purchase a nuclear weapon under the deal, Trump said.

Trump added that the Strait of Hormuz — a crucial waterway for the flow of oil which Iran claims to have shut down — would also open once the deal was signed.

"It's a very strong memorandum of understanding, that is a little conceptual," he added.

Iran and the United States have spent several weeks discussing a memorandum, with reports that it would halt the war for 60 to 90 days while more detailed talks take place on Tehran's nuclear programme.

Trump, however, said that "I don't want to say a deadline, because if I say a deadline, you'll say, 'Oh, he didn't meet the deadline.'"

The United States and Israel launched the war on Iran on February 28. A fragile ceasefire mediated by Pakistan was agreed in April, but both sides have traded fire in recent days.

"The whole Middle East is happy, and long beyond the Middle East," said Trump, whose war has caused global oil prices to spike, with inflation hitting a three-year high in the United States.

RelatedTRT World - Are Trump and Netanyahu drifting apart on the Middle East?

Netanyahu's claims

An increasingly frustrated Trump has for weeks veered between proclaiming a deal and threatening Iran, accusing Tehran as recently as Wednesday of "playing us for suckers."

On Thursday morning, Trump vowed "very hard" strikes on Iran that evening and promised to take the country's key oil infrastructure in what would have been a major escalation.

"At some point in the not too distant future, we will be taking Kharg Island, and other oil infrastructure points, and assume total control of their Oil and Gas Markets, much like we have with Venezuela," he said on social media.

Kharg Island is at the heart of Iran's oil export industry, a lynchpin of the country's battered economy. It sits off Iran's Gulf coast, hundreds of kilometres northwest of the narrow, strategic Strait of Hormuz.

But a few hours later, he backtracked, saying in another social media post that "final points have been... approved by all parties involved."

"Based on the fact that discussions with the Islamic Republic of Iran have been brought to the highest level of Iranian leadership and approved, I have... cancelled the scheduled strikes and bombings against Iran this evening," Trump said.

Less than two hours after saying he had cancelled the strikes, Trump then announced the deal.

Later on Thursday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office claimed that Trump vowed any Iran-US deal would include commitments to remove Tehran's enriched nuclear material, and welcomed the US president's commitments on limiting Iran's nuclear and missile programmes.

"Although Israel is not party to the memorandum of understanding, the prime minister expressed his appreciation for President Trump's commitment that the final agreement at the conclusion of negotiations will include the removal of enriched material, the dismantling of enrichment infrastructure, limits on missile production, and the cessation of Iran's support for its terrorist proxies in the region," Netanyahu's office claimed on X after the two spoke.

SOURCE:TRT World and Agencies