quarta-feira, 22 de abril de 2026

Trust Trump? Iran’s Doubts Shadow Peace Talks.

 



Trust Trump? Iran’s Doubts Shadow Peace Talks.

 

Iranian leaders fear being burned again by President Trump, who tore up a nuclear agreement reached during the Obama administration after lengthy negotiations.

 

Michael Crowley

By Michael Crowley

Reporting from Washington

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/21/us/politics/trust-trump-iran.html

April 21, 2026

 

President Trump and Iran’s leaders have wide differences on many issues, from nuclear technology to the Strait of Hormuz. But their main obstacle to striking a lasting peace agreement may be a matter of trust.

 

Always wary of the United States, Iranian officials consider Mr. Trump particularly treacherous. They remember the way, during his first term as president, Mr. Trump simply abandoned a nuclear deal Iran had struck with the Obama administration and other world powers after nearly two years of negotiations. Mr. Trump did not claim that Iran was violating that deal; he simply didn’t like it.

 

When the Biden administration tried to coax Iran into a similar agreement a few years later, Iran’s leadership demanded a guarantee that a future Trump administration would not simply tear it up again, according to former U.S. officials. They had no way of providing one.

 

And twice over the past year, Mr. Trump has entered into diplomatic talks with Iran only to launch airstrikes while negotiations were still in their early stages. In late February, Mr. Trump sent envoys to meet with Iranian officials in Geneva just one day before Iran’s supreme leader was killed in an airstrike that began weeks of U.S. and Israeli bombing. By the time of that meeting, Mr. Trump had already committed to war, according to U.S. officials.

 

After a first round of talks earlier this month ended in rancor, Iranian officials said a main reason was a U.S. failure to gain their trust. On Tuesday, Vice President JD Vance delayed his departure to Pakistan for a potential second round of talks, as Iranian officials again raised the point.

 

On Monday, Iranian state media reported that the country’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, had warned in a Sunday phone call with Pakistan’s prime minister that “the U.S. seeks to repeat previous patterns and betray diplomacy,” according to the Islamic Republic News Agency.

 

Fearful of being burned again, Iran is insisting on incremental steps and retaining leverage — such as at least partial control of its uranium stockpile for as long as possible. But experts said Iran faced a disadvantage because any plausible deal would require it to take steps that would ultimately be irreversible, such as eventually surrendering its uranium supply.

 

The distrust is a busy two-way street: The United States says that Iran has routinely lied for years by claiming its nuclear program was for peaceful purposes only, and points to uncovered evidence of Tehran’s past military nuclear research. Iran has also flouted its international commitments by building secret underground nuclear facilities.

 

Mr. Trump has called Iran’s leaders “crazy,” “insane” and “lunatics.”

 

Iran has spent decades deceiving the world about its nuclear program, hiding facilities, concealing materials and activities, and feeding the International Atomic Energy Agency false or incomplete information,” said Michael Doran, a former senior national security official in the George W. Bush administration. “That record leaves no basis for confidence in Iran’s assurances about its intentions.”

 

During nuclear arms talks with the Soviet Union, President Ronald Reagan popularized the phrase “trust, but verify.” It is unclear whether Iran and the Trump administration can even meet that standard.

 

The level of trust between the United States and Iran has always been very low, but now it is nonexistent,” said Karim Sadjadpour, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

 

The Islamic Republic believes the United States could attack at any moment, including during negotiations, as Trump has done twice before,” he added. “Washington will never believe the Islamic Republic has renounced its nuclear weapons ambitions, even if it agrees to a compromise.”

 

Iran has an added reason for skepticism in Mr. Trump’s military partnership with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel. Mr. Netanyahu would like to resume the joint U.S.-Israeli bombing campaign as soon as an April 7 cease-fire agreement expires. Mr. Trump extended the truce on Tuesday, hours before the deadline.

 

Iranian propaganda has depicted Mr. Trump as Mr. Netanyahu’s “puppet,” and Iranian officials surely fear that the Israeli prime minister, who made a strong original case for war at the White House, will persuade Mr. Trump to abandon diplomacy.

 

Despite it all, both Mr. Trump and Iran appear willing to give diplomacy a try. They would hardly be the first enemies to overcome deceit and betrayal and reach a successful agreement. During his first term, Mr. Trump himself struck a deal with the Afghan Taliban — Islamist radicals who had fought the United States for 20 years — to withdraw American troops from the country.

 

Even if the two sides can overcome their expectations of treachery, the distrust complicates negotiations that Mr. Trump says can be concluded quickly. That is a blithe hope, according to veteran diplomats and Iran experts.

 

Designing a deal will require calibrating its step-by-step implementation to minimize the opportunities for one side to obtain an advantage and walk away.

 

That too is complicated because most of the concessions required of Iran are concrete and irreversible, such as turning over or downblending its highly enriched uranium,” said Robert Malley, a lead negotiator with Iran during the Obama and Biden administrations.

 

In contrast, most of the expected U.S. concessions are notional and reversible, such as lifting sanctions or providing access to frozen assets,” he added.

 

As a result, Mr. Malley said, Iran will insist “on a slow, incremental, step-by-step approach” to implementing any agreement, as a way to test Mr. Trump’s compliance.

 

But Mr. Trump, hardly known for his patience, may balk at that approach.

 

Looming over it all will be Iran’s memory of Mr. Trump’s abrogation of the Obama nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, under which Iran agreed to 15 years of limits on its nuclear program in return for sanctions relief.

 

The agreement took some 20 months to negotiate, with Russia, China, Britain, Germany, France and the European Union joining the United States and Iran in countless rounds of talks. All agreed that Iran was in compliance with the agreement — until Mr. Trump arrived at the White House.

 

Calling the deal “a disaster,” Mr. Trump withdrew from it in 2018 and hammered Iran with new sanctions. In response, Tehran blew through the caps it had agreed to place on its nuclear program, enriching enough uranium to near-military grade levels to come within weeks of bomb-making capability. (Experts say it could still take Iran many months to build a nuclear bomb once it has refined enough uranium for the task.)

 

Mr. Trump cited that nuclear progress as grounds for striking its nuclear facilities last June. The strikes, known as Operation Midnight Hammer, came as the U.S. and Iran were negotiating through Omani mediators.

 

When Mr. Malley led indirect U.S. talks with Iran during the Biden administration, seeking to revive the Obama nuclear agreement, Iranian officials insisted on guarantees that the United States could not once again unilaterally withdraw from the deal. Mr. Malley insisted just as firmly that such a guarantee was not possible.

 

Given the depth of mistrust, as well as the sensitivity of the issues being negotiated, it’s very unlikely a deal of this magnitude can be negotiated over a few weeks,” Mr. Sadjadpour said. “More commonly it has taken many months, if not years.”

 

Michael Crowley covers the State Department and U.S. foreign policy for The Times. He has reported from nearly three dozen countries and often travels with the secretary of state.

‘He talks too much’: how Trump’s erratic commentary is the real block to an Iran deal

 


Analysis

‘He talks too much’: how Trump’s erratic commentary is the real block to an Iran deal

Patrick Wintour

Diplomatic editor

US president’s contradictory statements only make Tehran more wary of anything but the most watertight deal

 

Tue 21 Apr 2026 17.49 BST

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/apr/21/trump-one-man-whatsapp-group-diplomacy-derailing-peace-talks

 

Donald Trump’s blend of threats and hubristic commentary, often casually dismissive of Iran, has, as much as the continuation of the US naval blockade of Iranian ports, been a key stumbling block to restarting peace talks between the two countries under Pakistan’s mediation in Islamabad.

 

However much the Iranian foreign ministry insists it will not respond to every social media utterance issued by the US president on Iran, and sometimes there are as many as seven a day, Tehran cannot ignore them all, even if they contradict what the Iranians are being told in private about Trump’s true intentions.

 

Indeed, Trump’s impatience and rough-house diplomatic style has become a self-standing impediment to a solution.

 

Iran’s chief negotiator, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, warned that “by imposing a siege and violating the ceasefire”, the US president “seeks to turn this negotiating table – in his own imagination – into a table of surrender or to justify renewed warmongering. We do not accept negotiations under the shadow of threats, and in the past two weeks, we have prepared to reveal new cards on the battlefield.”

 

Iran’s ambassador to Pakistan, Reza Amiri Moghadam, made a similar point with a reference to Jane Austen, saying: “It’s a truth universally acknowledged that a single country in possession of a large civilisation, will not negotiate under threat and force.”

 

 

Just as Trump has to handle his querulous political base and the stock market, so the Iranian leadership has to reassure a domestic constituency by pushing back against Trump’s claims of Iranian humiliation and desperation, or his insistence that Iran has climbed down on the key issue of its stockpile of highly enriched uranium.

 

Trump, for instance, last Friday responded to a tweet by Abbas Araghchi, the Iranian foreign minister, that Iran would lift some of the restrictions in the strait of Hormuz by effectively hailing Iran’s defeat, instead of reciprocating by lifting the US blockade, as Iran had expected.

 

Later, in one of many phone interviews that day, Trump said: “They [Iran] want me to open it. The Iranians desperately want it opened. I’m not opening it until a deal is signed.” In another unfiltered interview, he said: “They have agreed to everything,” adding specifically: “They have agreed to never close the strait of Hormuz again.” A day later, Iran closed the strait, leaving the impression that Trump, not for the first time, underestimated Iran’s resolve.

 

One Iranian diplomatic outpost in Ghana pointed out on Tuesday: “In the past 24 hours the president of the United States has: — Thanked Iran for closure of Hormuz; threatened Iran; blamed China; praised China; declared the blockade a success; confirmed Iran restocked through the blockade; promised a deal with Iran; promised bombs will fall on Iran.” The embassy described Trump as a one-man WhatsApp chat group.

 

At the weekend, Iran’s deputy foreign minister, Saeed Khatibzadeh, said of Trump: “He talks too much.”

 

By Tuesday, in a string of contradictory remarks, Trump said: “I expect to be bombing,” adding the military was raring to go, in reference to the imminent expiry of the deadline he would not be extending. Yet two sentences later, he said the Iranians would be attending the talks starting on Wednesday.

 

Through the juxtaposition of contradictory sentiments, he simultaneously praised and buried Iran.

 

“Iran can get themselves on a very good footing, a strong nation, a wonderful nation. They have an incredible people,” he said, before adding: “They seem to be bloodthirsty and they are led by some very unfortunately tough people and not in a nice way. We are much tougher than they are – not even close – but they have to use reason and common sense, not be a country based on death and horror.”

 

All this may be intended to scramble Iran’s diplomatic radar, but so far the only effect has been to make the country more wary and more determined only to agree to a deal if it includes a clear irreversible enforcement mechanism that requires Trump to stick with any agreement he seals.

Trump announces extension to Iran ceasefire | The World with Dominic Waghorn

terça-feira, 21 de abril de 2026

Trump extends ceasefire until Iran submits “unified” peace proposal | BBC News

Trump announces indefinite Iran ceasefire: What it means for the war


Trump announces extension of Iran ceasefire until ‘discussion concluded’

 



Trump announces extension of Iran ceasefire until ‘discussion concluded’

 

Declaration comes amid intense efforts to bring two sides together in Pakistan for new round of talks

 

Robert Tait, Jason Burke and Shah Meer Baloch

Tue 21 Apr 2026 23.32 BST

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/apr/21/push-to-bring-us-and-iran-together-for-peace-talks-as-ceasefire-deadline-looms

 

Donald Trump unilaterally announced an extension of the two-week ceasefire with Iran on Tuesday amid frantic efforts to bring the two sides back to the negotiating table.

 

Hours after announcing that he “expected to be bombing”, the US president said he would extend the ceasefire until Iranian negotiators submitted a proposal for peace.

 

“Based on the fact that the Government of Iran is seriously fractured, not unexpectedly so and, upon the request of Field Marshal Asim Munir, and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, of Pakistan, we have been asked to hold our Attack on the Country of Iran until such time as their leaders and representatives can come up with a unified proposal,” he wrote on his Truth Social platform.

 

“I have therefore directed our Military to continue the Blockade and, in all other respects, remain ready and able, and will therefore extend the Ceasefire until such time as their proposal is submitted, and discussions are concluded, one way or the other.”

 

The declaration came in a topsy-turvy day in which an expected trip to Islamabad by JD Vance, the vice-president, had been put on hold and Trump ramped up his bellicose rhetoric, saying the US military was “raring to go”.

 

Trump’s sharp about-turn drew a withering early response from Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of the Iranian parliament who has emerged as the Islamic regime’s lead negotiator in recent talks.

 

Ghalibaf’s personal adviser dismissed the ceasefire extension as “a ploy to buy time for a surprise strike”, adding that “the time for Iran to take the initiative has come”.

 

“The losing side cannot dictate terms,” Mahdi Mohammadi wrote on social media. “The continuation of the siege must be met with a military response.”

 

Senior figures of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps – who have the upper hand in Iran’s leadership – were angered by Trump’s flurry of social media posts last Friday, in which he all but proclaimed victory while depicting Iran as surrendering on key points, including its nuclear programme. Iranian anger led to the strait of Hormuz being re-closed a day after the foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, had declared it open.

 

However, Sharif – who has acted as the principal mediator – thanked Trump. “Pakistan shall continue its earnest efforts for [a] negotiated settlement of [the] conflict,” he posted.

 

The US president had earlier told the US business news network CNBC that he did not want to extend the ceasefire with Tehran, insisting the US was in a strong position and was “going to end up with a great deal”. Trump has previously said that targets for new US attacks would include power stations and other civilian infrastructure.

 

Iran appeared unwilling to bend to Trump’s threats, though analysts say there is fierce disagreement among its leaders over how to respond to US pressure and whether to risk a potentially devastating new wave of bombing.

 

Iranian state television on Tuesday broadcast a message confirming that “no delegation from Iran has visited Islamabad … so far” and Ghalibaf accused the US president of seeking to turn the negotiating table into a “table of surrender”.

 

“We do not accept negotiations under the shadow of threats,” he wrote in a social media post, and said Iran was preparing “to reveal new cards on the battlefield”.

 

The ongoing US Navy blockade of Iranian ports appears to a major hurdle in arranging a second round of talks.

 

Iran has said the US must end the blockade in order for negotiations to resume. But Trump and Treasury secretary Scott Bessent on Tuesday both warned that the blockade will continue. “In a matter of days, Kharg Island storage will be full and the fragile Iranian oil wells will be shut in,” Bessent said in a statement on X.

 

In a meeting with Trump’s core national security team on Tuesday afternoon, it was decided the US would keep up the pressure on Iran by maintaining the blockade – reducing Iran’s perceived leverage after they closed the strait, according to two people briefed on the matter.

 

A first round of talks in Islamabad 10 days ago ended with no sign of agreement on the future of the strait of Hormuz, the key waterway which was closed to shipping by Iran in the early days of the conflict, cutting the supply of around a fifth of the world’s oil and gas.

 

Fatih Birol, the head of the International Energy Agency, said the combined impact of the conflict’s effects on oil, alongside the effects of Russia’s war with Ukraine on gas supplies, was “the biggest crisis in history” in global energy markets.

 

The US last week imposed a blockade on Iranian ports to pressure Tehran into reopening the strait, and on Sunday it seized an Iranian cargo vessel.

 

US forces then escalated the campaign on Tuesday, boarding an oil tanker previously under sanctions for smuggling Iranian crude oil in Asia. Ship-tracking data showed the vessel in the Indian Ocean between Sri Lanka and Indonesia around the time it was intercepted.

 

Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said on Iranian state TV that US moves against the two vessels amounted to “piracy at sea and state terrorism” and questioned Washington’s seriousness in negotiating.

 

The closure of the strait by Iran threatens a global recession and has given Tehran a powerful strategic weapon to counter the overwhelming conventional military superiority of its enemies. The war began in February with a first wave of bombing by the US and Israel, which killed the then supreme leader of Iran, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

 

Yvette Cooper, the UK’s foreign secretary, who has been holding discussions with counterparts aimed at safeguarding the strait, has described it as “a critical diplomatic moment” in the crisis.

 

In Islamabad, Pakistani officials have expressed confidence that Iran will resume talks in what are the highest-level negotiations between the two countries since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

 

A spokesperson said the Pakistani foreign minister, Ishaq Dar, met on Tuesday with the acting US ambassador in Islamabad to urge a ceasefire extension. Dar also met the ambassador from China, which is a key trading partner with Iran.

 

“Pakistan has made sincere efforts to convince the Iranian leadership to participate in the second round of talks, and these efforts continue,” Pakistan’s information minister, Attaullah Tarar, said on X.

 

Security has been tightened across Pakistan’s capital, where authorities have deployed thousands of personnel and increased patrols along routes leading to the airport. Government offices, schools and colleges in the city have been shut down and much of the centre barred to civilians.

 

“If they don’t come to Islamabad, or the second round does not take place, it will be an embarrassing situation for Pakistan as well,” Nusrat Javed, a political analyst and columnist, said.

 

Over the weekend, Iran said it had received new proposals from Washington, but also suggested a wide gap remains between the sides. Issues that derailed the last round of negotiations included Iran’s nuclear enrichment programme, its support for a series of militant movements that act as regional proxies, and the strait of Hormuz.

 

Trump said Iran had no choice and would take part in talks. “We’ve taken out their navy, we’ve taken out their air force, we’ve taken out their leaders.”

 

The US president again claimed “regime change” and said those now in charge were “much more rational”.

 

Many experts say the conflict has led to a radicalisation of Iran’s regime, with more pragmatic figures having been killed or sidelined, allowing senior officials in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to increase their hold on power.

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