US and Iran to close deal within a day
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US-Israel-Iran war latest updates: Trump says Strait of Hormuz will reopen as Tehran demands $100-120 billion in frozen assets for deal
India, June 14 -- US-Israel-Iran War Latest News: A potentially historic diplomatic breakthrough may be on the horizon as US President Donald Trump announced that a deal with Iran is expected to be signed on Sunday,
An Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson said the signing of a framework agreement between Washington and Tehran will “not be tomorrow” but could take place in the “coming days.” Follow for live updates.
US and Iran appear close to signing the first stage of a peace deal, the two sides differ on when it will be signed.
US President Donald Trump said on Saturday that the agreement with Iran is set to be signed Sunday, and that signing it would lead to the Strait of Hormuz reopening. Trump said the deal “is scheduled to get signed tomorrow,
Initially viewed as a placeholder after his predecessor died in a helicopter crash in 2024, the president has emerged as an unlikely survivor during one of the most turbulent periods in the Islamic Republic’s history.
US Iran peace deal 2026 reached a key milestone Friday when Pakistan confirmed both sides had agreed on the final text of the Islamabad Declaration. The MOU would reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 30 days but leaves Iran’s 440kg nuclear stockpile untouched for 60-day follow-on talks,
Despite conflicting accounts of the details, both sides appear to be in alignment that a peace agreement is imminent.
President Trump expressed frustration with Iran after its Foreign Ministry said Tehran “had not reached a final conclusion” on any peace agreement. The president called them “very dishonorable people to deal with” and warned,
When Tehran oil infrastructure caught fire in March after Israeli strikes, the blaze produced toxic fumes detectable across an area the size of Italy.
MEAWW News on MSN
Tehran says US can be a 'very good friend' if Trump follows an 'America First' approach
Tehran offers a rare diplomatic olive branch, says peace hinges on Trump’s approach
