Trump accuses Iran of 'playing games' over ceasefire proposal, warns 'they will be laughing no longer!'
US President Trump has accused Iran of “playing games” in his first public comment since Iran responded to the US ceasefire proposal and has warned that “they will be laughing no longer!”
Quick reaction
One tap helps tune what we surface next.
Reader discussion
Public commentsNo comments yet. Start the discussion around this signal.
Follow this signal
Get updates on this story
We will email you if this changes materially. No spam. Daily brief optional.
Map context
See this on the live map
Keep the story in context with nearby live signals, countries, and category movement.
Related coverage
Hubs
Briefings
More story pages
Iran refuses to dismantle nuclear facilities in peace proposal response, but signals willingness to suspend uranium enrichment for a period shorter than 20-year US demand, WSJ reports.
In response to the American peace proposal, Iran refused to dismantle its nuclear facilities, The Wall Street Journal reported citing sources. According to them, Tehran is ready to agree to suspend uranium enrichment, but not for 20 years as the US demands.
Trump says Iran's response 'totally unacceptable'
Trump said he has read the response from Iran's so-called 'representatives' and called it totally unacceptable.
Trump secures release of three Polish and two Moldovan prisoners from Belarusian and Russian detention. President thanks envoy John Coale and Belarus' Lukashenko for cooperation.
Donald Trump announced the release of three Polish and two Moldovan prisoners from Belarusian and Russian detention, crediting his special envoy John Coale and thanking BelarusianAlexander Lukashenko for cooperation.
Iran proposes 30-day nuclear talks with US, offers to transfer enriched uranium and gradually open Strait of Hormuz in exchange for lifting port and ship restrictions, WSJ reports.
Iran has proposed to the US to begin 30-day talks on its nuclear program, partially transfer enriched uranium stocks to a third country, and gradually open the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for the lifting of restrictions on Iranian ships and ports, according to The Wall Street Journal citing sources.
More live signals
Continue with the live feed.
The fastest nearby updates load from the public feed, not the enriched story endpoint.