Trump Says There Are ‘No Limits’ to His Power
- On Wednesday, President Donald Trump signed an interim agreement with Iran in Versailles alongside French President Emmanuel Macron, immediately lifting restrictions on Iranian oil sales and establishing a 60-day negotiating window for a final nuclear pact.
- Concluding the war after 100 days, the agreement between the United States and Iran achieved little of its strategic objectives while aiming to stabilize the Iranian economy and address nuclear concerns.
- Financial provisions include access to oil funds held in Qatar and a $300 billion reconstruction fund supported by regional partners, though experts remain skeptical about the feasibility of such a large-scale investment.
- Vice President JD Vance told reporters "not a cent" of U.S. taxpayer money will fund the initiative, while former national security adviser Susan Rice denounced the agreement as a "jaw-dropping, horrific surrender document" on social media.
- Under International Atomic Energy Agency supervision, Iran committed to reiterate it does not seek nuclear weapons and will down-blend enriched uranium stockpiles, as the administration seeks a final agreement before the November midterm elections.
102 Articles
102 Articles
Trump’s new Iran deal faces nuclear blind spot over uranium stockpile, experts warn
Nuclear experts are warning that Trump’s new Iran framework could leave Tehran with too much control over its uranium stockpile unless inspectors first fully account for and secure the material.
Trump raises pressure on Iran in public speech aboard new presidential plane, warning that he could resume military operations against Iran if an agreement is not reached within 60 days, and as a result, oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz could resume
– We have 60 days. We have to make a deal, otherwise we will do things that will not make them happy, says Trump. The statement comes after the US and Iran opened for new negotiations on Tehran's nuclear program and the security of the Strait of Hormuz - one of the world's most important oil transportation routes. At the same time, Trump boasted about the US military's previous operations against Iran.
How Iran benefits from Trump's deal and what's next
This week, the U.S. and Iran signed an agreement to end hostilities, reopen oil routes and begin negotiations on the Iranian nuclear program. But Trump's deal has been criticized at home and abroad. The panel discusses how Iran immediately benefits from the plan and whether a long-term agreement will ever be signed.

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