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Trump demands changes to US-Iran deal

President Trump seeks revisions to the U.S.-Iran ceasefire deal, focusing on stricter control of the Strait of Hormuz and Iranโ€™s removal of highly enriched uranium. Iran insists on meeting its demands fully, or it will reject the agreement, leaving the fragile 60-day truce in limbo.

Trump seeking edits to US-Iran deal, US media report
BBC World News โ€” 31 May 2026
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President Donald Trump has pushed for changes to the U.S.-Iran ceasefire deal, according to U.S. media reports, as the White House seeks revisions just days after officials said both sides had agreed on a framework. The proposed edits focus on two key issues: tighter control over the Strait of Hormuzโ€”a critical shipping routeโ€”and Iranโ€™s removal of highly enriched uranium. While the White House has not commented on the reports, the move signals that the deal, meant to pause months of fighting, remains fragile and subject to last-minute demands from Washington.

Iran isnโ€™t backing down either. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Iranโ€™s chief negotiator, warned Sunday that Tehran would reject any agreement unless its demands were fully met. That stance complicates the situation further, as the two sides appeared close to finalizing a 60-day truce that would include reopening the Strait of Hormuzโ€”partially blocked during recent tensionsโ€”and restarting talks on Iranโ€™s nuclear program. In exchange, Iran could see billions of dollars in frozen assets released under sanctions relief, a major incentive for Tehran but one that faces skepticism in Washington.

The back-and-forth shows just how shaky the deal remains. After a White House meeting Friday ended without clear next steps, Trump asked for several amendments, according to Axios. His Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth then warned that if the final terms donโ€™t meet Trumpโ€™s standards, military strikes could resume. โ€œOur stockpiles are more than suited for that,โ€ Hegseth said, underscoring the administrationโ€™s willingness to keep pressure on Iran. Yet Iranian officials dismissed the U.S. messaging as speculative, with Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi saying nothing is final until both sides sign off.

The stakes are high. A flawed deal risks prolonging the conflict or sparking new clashes, while a rejected one could push the U.S. and Iran back toward confrontation. For now, both sides are still negotiating, with Iranโ€™s state media calling the talks โ€œongoingโ€ and full of โ€œregular proposals and amendments.โ€ But with Trumpโ€™s red linesโ€”especially no nuclear weapons for Iranโ€”and Iranโ€™s insistence on full concessions, the path to peace remains narrow and uncertain.

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