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Trump Signals Shift Toward Iran War Exit

US President Donald Trump has indicated a possible end to military operations against Iran after announcing a halt to a campaign aimed at breaking Tehran’s control over the Strait of Hormuz. The decision came as reports suggested the two sides are nearing a preliminary framework for talks to end the conflict.

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The move points to a potential diplomatic opening following weeks of tension over the strategic waterway, a key route for global oil shipments. While signalling willingness to pursue negotiations, Trump warned that military strikes could resume if talks fail.

Framework for negotiations

According to officials familiar with discussions, the United States and Iran are considering a one-page memorandum of understanding that would establish a 30-day window to negotiate a broader agreement.

During that period, both sides would ease restrictions on shipping through the Strait of Hormuz while diplomats work toward reopening the route fully. The talks would also address limits on Iran’s nuclear activities and the possible lifting of US sanctions.

In a social media message, Trump said the campaign known as “Epic Fury” could end if Iran agrees to the proposed terms.

“Assuming Iran agrees to give what has been agreed to… the already legendary Epic Fury will be at an end,” he wrote, adding that the blockade would then allow the strait to reopen to all vessels, including those from Iran.

He also warned that if negotiations collapse, the United States would resume bombing operations at “a much higher level and intensity”.

Doubts over lasting agreement

Some analysts remain sceptical about whether the two sides can reach a durable settlement. Hein Goemans, a political scientist at the University of Rochester who studies how wars end, questioned whether either side is willing to make the concessions required for a long-term deal.

He argued that even if Tehran agrees to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, the confrontation has demonstrated its ability to disrupt shipping in the future, which could continue to threaten global energy markets.

Goemans also noted deep mistrust between the two governments. Iranian leaders, he said, may doubt the reliability of any deal with Washington, given the possibility that US policy could shift quickly.

Nuclear issues and political pressure

Officials say the proposed nuclear provisions resemble the framework negotiated during the administration of Barack Obama, which included a 10 to 15-year limit on uranium enrichment. Trump withdrew the United States from that agreement during his first term.

If Trump agrees to reduce sanctions or unfreeze Iranian assets as part of a new deal, he may face opposition from Israel as well as critics within his own party who favour a tougher stance on Tehran’s nuclear programme.

Talks between Washington and Tehran have repeatedly stalled in recent months. Negotiators met for more than 20 hours in Islamabad, Pakistan last month but failed to reach an agreement.

The US delegation was led by Vice President J. D. Vance, who said significant differences remained, particularly over Washington’s demand that Iran abandon its nuclear programme entirely. A follow-up meeting was later postponed after Tehran declined to participate.

Economic pressure and international role

Both countries face growing economic pressure to find a resolution. In the United States, rising fuel costs have pushed the national average gasoline price to $4.53 per gallon, according to the American Automobile Association.

Iran, meanwhile, is grappling with high inflation and worsening poverty, conditions worsened by restrictions on its energy exports.

China has also urged a diplomatic solution. During talks in Beijing, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told his Iranian counterpart Abbas Araghchi that a full cessation of hostilities should not be delayed.

Trump is expected to meet Chinese leader Xi Jinping later this month, adding further pressure to show progress toward ending the confrontation.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now. Source 7 May 2026

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JerryM Gold Member

JerryM

Advanced Member
10 hours ago, richard_smith237 said:

As for NBC itself - it is fair to say the network is often perceived as broadly critical of Trump, particularly in its political coverage.

That's probably why the 2 anonymous U.S. government officials decided to give the leak to NBC instead of FOX.

thaibreaker Gold Member

thaibreaker

Advanced Member
15 hours ago, candide said:

Trump will get any piece of paper signed and claim a victory, and the MAGA sheep will believe him! 😂

Right. And the ironic thing is that there is nothing in this suggested "deal" that is any better than the one the Obama administration already made with Iran in 2015, and Trump cancelled..

A decade later, many billions of dollars spent on a disastrous war, no regime change, several American bases shot to pieces in the area, and many American lives lost, for absolutely nothing. The US even bombed a girls' school, and killed 160 children.

The US have made a complete fool of themselves, and also messing up the world's economy. They have even made Iran look victorious. Iran is still standing strong, and the regime is even tightening its grip towards their own people. Iran can and will in fact declare victory in this conflict, and now they know they can use the Hormuz strait for any future conflicts as well.

This war can not be classified as anything else than a disaster. But what can be expected from this completely incompetent Trump administration.

thaibreaker Gold Member

thaibreaker

Advanced Member

I can of course add that, sure, USA and Israel have bombed a lot of Iranian infrastructure, military bases and personnel, their weapon capacity, Iranian military ships and whatnot. But it has not lead to anything, and has only made a small dent on Iran. Without boots on the ground and a regime change, there is nothing that can't be fixed, or re-established. Iran has oil, lots of it, and will use it to arm themselves to their teeth again, and then do whatever they want with its uranium.

There was never a plan B, or even a plan A in this war, it was doomed before it even started.

Iran can, and will declare victory in this war, no matter what rants Trump squeezes out on truth social, or his lies and exaggeration told from the white house.

Iran has shown that they can control the Hormuz strait, and can use that on any other conflict.

It has been nothing but embarrassing to watch this whole ordeal.

earlinclaifornia Platinum Member

earlinclaifornia

Advanced Member

From the look of the chart it is a good time to take the money and run.

Mission Accoplishmant

wealth.jpg

Woke to Sounds Gold Member

Woke to Sounds

Advanced Member

This is very good decisive and peaceable action by Mr Trump, once again showing he is not only a friend to Israel but to the world.

Meanwhile my stock positions have done handsomely in the interim.

JerryM Gold Member

JerryM

Advanced Member
10 minutes ago, Woke to Sounds said:

This is very good decisive and peaceable action by Mr Trump, once again showing he is not only a friend to Israel but to the world.

Meanwhile my stock positions have done handsomely in the interim.

You can find opinions that the stock market is doing well DESPITE President Trump's no-war effort not because of it.

Or as one financial observer put it 24 April: For buy-and-hold investors in the U.S. stock market, it’s almost as though the war in Iran never happened.

simon43 Star Member

simon43

Advanced Member

I'm not sure what Trump has achieved here:

  • Iran is not beaten - the previous government is still there

  • Iran still has a nuclear programme

  • Iran still controls the Straits of Hormuz etc

  • Iran is still throwing missiles at Israel

etc etc blah blah blah.

The fact is, the USA has been shown to be military weak - it has been unable to subdue Iran on almost all fronts.

bannork Star Member

bannork

Newsman

It seems Trump has upset the UAE as well as the Saudis. Once Project Freedom began the UAE was hit by several missiles from Iran, including a refinery set on fire.

Whilst the US sank some Iranian boats, it didn't attack the Iranian bases from which the missiles were fired, Trump pivoting to furthering talks with the Iranians instead.

This casual dismissal of allies' concerns angered the UAE.

The realisation for all of the US former allies that in Trump's tenure they are not allies, merely subsidiaries to be summoned and dismissed at will, can only further weaken the US as former allies seek new alliances.

The UAE has left OPEC and the petrol dollar, China is the largest buyer of Saudi oil. Are we likely to see more future transactions in the Chinese yuan and a subsequent decline in the petrol dollar?

LosLobo Platinum Member

LosLobo

Advanced Member
17 hours ago, richard_smith237 said:

If you view this through the lens of warfare rather than diplomacy alone, there is a credible argument that Iran’s strategic position has been significantly weakened.

Iran’s nuclear capability has not been erased - the scientific knowledge, technical expertise, and access to some raw materials still exist - but its operational capacity, infrastructure, supply chains, and broader military network have been heavily degraded. Key commanders, facilities, proxies, and strategic assets have been lost or diminished, reducing Iran’s ability to project power across the region in the way it once did.

The risk of future proliferation or regional escalation still exists, but the calculation in Tehran has changed. Iran now knows that pressure may no longer come only through sanctions, which it has historically learned to endure or circumvent, but through direct and sustained military action. That alters deterrence dynamics considerably.

It is also increasingly clear that several Gulf Arab states within the GCC - acting primarily in defence of their own regional security interests, not simply as extensions of US policy - view Iranian expansionism as a direct threat. Their growing security alignment with Israel and tacit cooperation with Western powers reflects that reality.

Iran has also paid a substantial price for its long-standing support of regional proxy groups including Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis, various Iraqi Shia militias, and elements operating in Syria. These networks gave Iran strategic depth, but they also made it vulnerable to retaliation across multiple fronts.

Whether the world is ultimately “safer” is still debatable. What is harder to dispute is that Iran’s margin for aggressive regional manoeuvring has narrowed considerably, and those within the regime contemplating escalation now better understand the scale of the consequences they may face.

It may be difficult to argue that this is an outright “win” for the US, but it is equally difficult to deny that Iran has suffered the greater strategic loss - to its military infrastructure, its regional proxy network, and its broader ability to project power across the Middle East.

What matters now is whether Iran’s capacity to destabilise the region has been meaningfully constrained - how far its reach can extend through proxies, militias, and coercive influence to fuel further regional tensions or threaten critical trade routes.

People often focus solely on the Strait of Hormuz, but Iran’s influence over the Houthis also created major risks to international shipping through the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea corridor. Iran’s strategic leverage has long relied on the implicit threat that it, directly or indirectly, could disrupt global energy flows and commercial shipping lanes whenever tensions escalated.

If that capability is reduced - if the cost of escalation now outweighs the benefit - then that is not simply a win for one country. It is a strategic gain for global trade stability, regional security, and every nation dependent on free navigation through those waterways.


Yes, Iran may have been weakened regionally, but that does not establish that JCPOA withdrawal and strikes made the world safer overall. Regional degradation, nuclear proliferation risk, and global security are distinct questions, and weakening conventional power can still increase the incentive to seek a nuclear deterrent.

Your argument fails on several points of logic:

  • Non sequitur — weaker regionally does not automatically mean safer globally.

  • Category error — mixes regional power, nuclear risk, and global security as if they are the same.

  • Unproven causal claim — assumes pressure always improves stability, which deterrence theory does not guarantee.

  • Hasty generalisation — relies on partial indicators to make broad claims.

  • False equivalence — assumes weaker capability equals lower threat.

Weakening conventional power while increasing nuclear incentive is not a clear security success.

stevenl Star Member

stevenl

Advanced Member
21 hours ago, candide said:

Trump will get any piece of paper signed and claim a victory, and the MAGA sheep will believe him! 😂

The sooner the better.

earlinclaifornia Platinum Member

earlinclaifornia

Advanced Member

Trump has better get Americans out of there.

earlinclaifornia Platinum Member

earlinclaifornia

Advanced Member

MAGA

We told you this would be life in the world he has managed to distroy.

Voters supporting MAGA your to blame.

MikeandDow Ruby Member

MikeandDow

Advanced Member
2 hours ago, earlinclaifornia said:

MAGA

We told you this would be life in the world he has managed to distroy.

Voters supporting MAGA your to blame.

It is not only the MAGA mob but all those yanks who voted this moron in who are to blame they do not understand what they have done that is the sad part !! how are you going to remove him ????? impeachment ??? he is in for life !!! you yanks are fools !!!

Mavideol Star Member

Mavideol

Advanced Member

as usual in situations like that Trump invading/starting a war with Iran without a plan and keeping lying on a hourly basis, the truth always comes out, there is always somebody within the close circle that doesn't accept the charade and when that happened they start to spill the beans and the famous claims about Iran's armies being completely obliterated is completely false, I do have the best advise for Trump (same as he gave Zelenskyy 1 year ago) Trump should accept Iran's deal/terms, count his losses, pack and move out as he has NO Cards, remember what he said

“You’re either going to make a deal, or we’re out, and if we’re out, you’ll fight it out. I don’t think it’s going to be pretty,” Trump told him. “You don’t have the cards.”

President Donald Trump’s chest-thumping narrative about his Middle East war has been undercut by a damning intelligence leak on the extent of Iran’s capabilities.

It’s nowhere near as dire as some have claimed,” the insider said of Iran’s economic situation.

A confidential CIA analysis delivered to policymakers just this week concluded that Iran can survive a U.S. naval blockade for at least three to four months before it plummets into economic hardship, four insiders told The Washington Post.

Bombshell Intel Leak Demolishes Trump’s War Story

https://au.yahoo.com/news/bombshell-intel-leak-demolishes-trump-184624688.html

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