Iran War
Live Updates: Trump Says He Hopes to Put War in ‘Rearview Mirror’
Iran’s
foreign minister said new talks on nuclear arms and sanctions relief would
start on Friday, right after an initial agreement is signed.
Max
Bearak
Updated
June 16,
2026, 4:37 p.m. ET33 minutes ago
Max
Bearak
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/06/16/world/iran-war-trump-us-deal
Here’s
the latest.
President
Trump said he hoped the war with Iran would soon be in the “rearview mirror” on
Tuesday, even though the terms of a cease-fire he signed with Tehran remained
secret and Vice President JD Vance acknowledged that it was “a very general
document” with few details.
Still,
Iranian and U.S. officials tamped down the heated rhetoric they had used in
recent weeks, expressing hopes that the short-term agreement expected to be
signed on Friday will lead to a long-term peace deal. “We’re dealing with
people that I think are very rational,” Mr. Trump said. Mohammed Reza Aref, one
of Iran’s vice presidents, said that he hoped to resolve outstanding issues and
called on Iranians to respect the outcome of the talks.
U.S. and
Iranian officials are expected to gather at the lakeside resort of Bürgenstock
in Switzerland on Friday to sign an initial agreement and kick off a 60-day
cease-fire and negotiating period in which they will try to resolve issues that
have kept the two countries at odds not just during the war, but for decades.
Mr. Trump
has said that on Friday, the United States and Iran will lift restrictions on
the movement of ships through the Strait of Hormuz. But even that step faces
hurdles that the preliminary agreement may not be able to immediately
eliminate.
U.S.
forces are searching for mines Iran may have laid in the strait. Shippers need
mine-free waters and a calmer atmosphere to feel comfortable moving through the
narrows. Months of hostilities in the region have left many skittish that
fighting could return at any moment.
Iranian
officials have also suggested that they may charge fees for ships passing
through the strait — something they did not do before the war.
The
thorniest points of contention still to be negotiated are what to do about
Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium and about its proxy war with
Israel. Israel’s military and the Iran-backed militia Hezbollah have carried
out attacks against each other since soon after the war with Iran began on Feb.
28. More than 3,600 people in Lebanon have been killed.
Abbas
Araghchi, the Iranian foreign minister, said that under the initial agreement,
Iran expected Israeli forces to immediately withdraw from Lebanon and halt
their attacks. “The end of the war also includes the end of occupation,” he
told a gathering of diplomats on Tuesday morning. “Without the withdrawal of
Israeli forces from the territories they occupied in this war, the war has not
fully ended.”
But
Israel has said its military will remain in Lebanon. Mr. Trump, for his part,
said that Israel was overly aggressive in that conflict and that “too many
people are being killed.”
Here’s
what else we’re covering:
Oil
prices: The price of Brent crude, the global oil benchmark, fell below $80 a
barrel on Tuesday for the first time since March, far below its wartime highs
but still well above the prewar price. Read more ›
Securing
the strait: Energy output is expected to take time to return to prewar levels
because of the effort involved in restoring production and repairing damaged
infrastructure.
G7
summit: At the meeting of the leaders of the world’s largest wealthy nations,
on the south shore of Lake Geneva, the focus was on Ukraine and the Middle East
as Mr. Trump sought help to clear the Strait of Hormuz.
U.S.
senators (don’t) react: Some lawmakers on Capitol Hill were reluctant to praise
the preliminary deal without seeing its terms, including Republicans like
Senator John Thune of South Dakota, the majority leader, and Senator Lindsey
Graham of South Carolina, a close ally of the president.


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