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Trump Promises a Deal “By the Weekend,” Araghchi Says No Progress: The Double Game of US-Iran Negotiations

Donald Trump. Photo: whitehouse.gov

TEHRAN (Realist English). Negotiations between the United States and Iran in early June 2026 have reached a critical phase. According to statements from both sides, they are “moving rapidly.” A rare unanimity in rhetoric can be observed.

President Donald Trump claims that the parties could sign a memorandum of understanding in the coming days. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirms that progress is possible at any moment — “today, tomorrow, or next week.” In turn, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi reported an exchange of final texts, which are currently being studied by both sides.

Content and Pitfalls of the Deal

Mutual Strikes in the Persian Gulf

From June 3 to 4, Tehran and Washington exchanged new strikes, jeopardizing the fragile ceasefire established on April 8. Key events:

Diplomatic Picture: A Gap in Rhetoric

While explosions thundered in the Persian Gulf, mutually exclusive statements continued in Washington and Tehran.

“You Would Have Been in Prison”: The Scandalous Trump-Netanyahu Call

Relations between the two closest allies are experiencing perhaps the most serious crisis in recent years.

Conclusions as of June 4

  1. US-Iranian negotiations are in a contradictory phase. The White House is publicly broadcasting optimism, linking a deal to Iran’s nuclear concessions. Tehran, for its part, denies progress and directly links any agreement to a ceasefire in Lebanon.
  2. Military escalation continues and is reaching a new level. The strike on Kuwait’s civilian airport is a landmark event that could provoke further destabilization in the region and deal a serious blow to the negotiation process.
  3. Israel finds itself in a tight grip of diplomatic pressure from the US, demonstrating a serious cooling of relations with Washington. Despite Netanyahu’s public defiance and his statements about readiness for a military solution, his influence on decision-making in the White House in recent days appears minimal.
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