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Matzav

Trump Blasts Tehran After Iran Leaks Its Own Demands In Peace Deal: ‘They Better Get Their Act Together!’

Jun 12, 2026·3 min read

President Trump sharply criticized Iran on Friday after Tehran suggested that key elements of a proposed peace agreement remain unresolved, insisting that Iranian officials are misrepresenting the status of negotiations and warning that the United States will not compromise on its core demands.

Trump’s frustration came after Iran’s foreign ministry stated that the country “had not reached a final conclusion” regarding any agreement. In response, the president described Iranian negotiators as “very dishonorable people to deal with” and cautioned that “they had better get their act together and fast!”

Reports from Iranian state media indicated that Tehran plans to continue discussions with Washington while seeking to preserve its uranium enrichment program. The reports also claimed Iran is unwilling to surrender oversight of the Strait of Hormuz and is demanding the release of $24 billion in frozen assets as “compensation” for losses suffered during the recent military campaign.

The president dismissed those reports outright, saying they were entirely inaccurate.

“What they said, including their weak and pathetic statement on having a deal, bears no relation to the truth,” the president wrote on Truth Social.

Trump said Thursday that negotiations had entered their final phase and asserted that Iran had agreed to terminate its nuclear weapons efforts. According to the president, an agreement could potentially be finalized and signed as soon as this weekend.

Throughout the talks, Trump has maintained that any agreement must permanently prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.

Iran, however, has presented a different interpretation of the draft accord. Officials in Tehran contend that the current language specifies that “Iran undertakes no new commitments” regarding nuclear weapons and that additional discussions on the issue would take place during a 60-day period after the agreement is signed.

Under the framework initially proposed by negotiators, the peace initiative was structured in two stages, with nuclear-related discussions scheduled for the second phase of the process.

The conflicting descriptions from Washington and Tehran have fueled uncertainty about the agreement, including how close it is to completion and what provisions it ultimately contains.

A senior administration official told The Post that the United States has identified five essential requirements that must be met before any deal is finalized.

According to the official, those conditions include the destruction of Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium, the dismantling of its nuclear infrastructure, withholding frozen Iranian funds until compliance is demonstrated, guaranteeing free passage through the Strait of Hormuz, and ending Iranian financial support for terrorist organizations.

“This is what they have agreed to. This is a performance-based deal,” the official said.

A separate White House official told Fox News that negotiations are approaching the finish line and estimated that the agreement is roughly 75% complete.

“While this is tentative, we feel confident that we will be signing this in the next few days,” the official said.

Iran’s foreign ministry acknowledged that most of the agreement’s language has already been completed but argued that unresolved disputes remain.

“Textually, the text has almost been finalized in its major parts. The problem is that the contradictory positions of the United States have always caused turbulence and disruption in this process,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei told Iranian state media.

{Matzav.com}

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