Trump
accuses Iran of stalling peace deal to ‘outwait’ him until US midterms
US
president sends contradictory messages about ending war at cabinet meeting with
call to bolster Abraham accords
Robert
Tait in Washington
Wed 27
May 2026 18.54 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/27/trump-cabinet-camp-david-washington-iran
Donald
Trump has accused Iran of trying to stall on making a peace agreement by
running down the clock before November’s US midterm elections in the hope of
getting better terms.
“They
thought they were going to outwait me, you know, ‘we’ll outwait him, he’s got
the midterms’,” the US president told a meeting of his cabinet at the White
House on Wednesday.
He
insisted the approach – supposedly aimed at ratcheting up pressure on the US
and global economies by keeping the strategically vital strait of Hormuz closed
– would fail, and claimed that Iran “wants very much to make a deal”.
“I don’t
care about the midterms, look what happened last night,” Trump said, an
apparent reference to the triumph of Ken Paxton, whom he had endorsed, over the
sitting Republican senator John Cornyn in the Texas Republican Senate primary.
Trump
said the Iranian economy was in freefall, suggesting that made it imperative
for Iran to compromise: “They have 250% inflation, their money has no value,
their whole economic system is broken down.”
His
comments, at the 12th cabinet meeting of Trump’s second term, came as talks
aimed at ending the near-three-month conflict are said to be at a crucial
stage. Current attempts to reach a deal had so far failed, he claimed, because
“we’re not satisfied with it”.
“But we
will be,” the president added. “Either that, or we will just have to finish the
job.”
Asked
whether he would agree to a short-term deal that allowed Iran and Oman to be in
control of the strait of Hormuz, Trump replied: “The strait is going to be open
to everybody. Nobody is going to control it. We’ll watch over it , but nobody
is going to control it. That’s part of the negotiation that we have. They would
like to control it. It’s international waters and Oman will behave just like
everybody else, or we will have to blow them up.”
He said
one consequence of a putative deal under discussion is that the strait – which
was a conduit for 20% of the world’s energy supplies before the war – would
open immediately.
At one
stage, Trump appeared to contradict himself after renewing his call on Arab
allies including Saudi Arabia and Qatar to sign the Abraham accords granting
full diplomatic recognition of Israel.
“I think
those countries owe to us … I don’t think we should make a deal if they don’t
sign,” he said.
But he
retreated when asked whether the Iran agreement was contingent on more
countries joining the accords – which were signed by the United Arab Emirates,
Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco during his first presidency – saying: “I don’t want
to say that. I’m not going to give you what’s contingent.”
He also
claimed to have brought about regime change in Iran through the assassinations
of a generation of the country’s leaders, including the supreme leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, its most powerful figure – even though he has been
succeeded by his son, Mojtaba Khamenei, who is considered to be more hardline
than his father.
“We
didn’t set out for regime change, but … we are dealing with a completely
different group of people than we were at the beginning,” Trump said. “I
actually find them to be smarter. One regime is gone, another regime is gone,
we are dealing with the third.”
The
gathering had originally been scheduled to take place in the bucolic setting of
Camp David, the presidential retreat that had previously been the site of
sensitive Middle East negotiations, including the historic Israeli-Egyptian
peace accords.
But Trump
switched it back to its more accustomed White House setting, citing adverse
weather forecasts.
The
initial decision to stage it at Camp David had raised eyebrows, given that
Trump had visited the presidential retreat deep in the Maryland countryside, 62
miles north-west of Washington, much less frequently than most of his
predecessors.
The
gathering comes as Trump’s approval ratings sink and economic pessimism rises
amid the war with Iran.
Trump
announced at the weekend that a deal to end hostilities was close at hand,
although the US on Monday struck Iranian targets, reportedly killing four
members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Negotiations, nevertheless,
were said to be continuing.
Trump –
who said last Saturday that an agreement with Iran “had been largely
negotiated” – has sent confusing signals on peace prospects after a largely
negative reaction from US rightwing circles and anti-Tehran hawks.
In a
social media post on Tuesday, he vented anger at media commentators who had
depicted the emerging terms as favorable to Iran and a potential humiliation
for him.
“If Iran
surrenders … and admit their defeat to the great power and force of the
magnificent USA, the Failing New York Times, the China Street Journal (WSJ!),
Corrupt and now Irrelevant CNN, and all other members of the Fake News Media,
will headline that Iran had a Masterful and Brilliant Victory over The United
States of America,” he wrote.
Participants
in the meeting included Tulsi Gabbard, who announced her forthcoming
resignation as director of national intelligence last week. Gabbard attracted
Trump’s ire last year after testifying to Congress that she believed Iran was
not pursuing nuclear weapons, just months before US forces bombed the country’s
uranium enrichment facilities.
Trump
paid tribute to Gabbard on Wednesday, calling her “a terrific person” and
prompting a round of applause from the rest of the cabinet. “Tulsi has worked
tirelessly to restore trust and focus, with the intelligence community and they
all respected her. They listened to her,” he said.

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