Trump Iran Deal Threatens Return to Bombing Iran If Violated

Donald Trump said the trump iran deal is not final and warned that the United States would return to bombing Iran if Tehran does not behave. Speaking before meeting Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi at the G7 summit, Trump called it a memorandum of understanding and tied the arrangement to rap…

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Donald Trump said the trump iran deal is not final and warned that the United States would return to bombing Iran if Tehran does not behave. Speaking before meeting Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi at the G7 summit, Trump called it a memorandum of understanding and tied the arrangement to rapid compliance.

Trump also said the deal his administration has struck with Iran will act as a wall to Iran having a nuclear weapon. JD Vance said the text of the US-Iran deal would be released on Friday at the latest, after Washington pushed to publish it sooner.

Trump’s warning in Évian-les-Bains

In Évian-les-Bains, France, Trump used unusually direct language about the agreement’s limits. “It’s not final. It’s a memorandum of understanding, and if I don’t like it, we’ll go back to shooting at them, dropping bombs on their head,” he said. Trump also described the memorandum of understanding as a “strong one” and said “the process will start again” if Iran goes back on the deal.

The warning puts the deal’s durability on the same political track as its rollout. Trump’s language leaves the arrangement dependent on continued compliance from Iran, rather than on a settled treaty structure.

JD Vance on the text release

Vance said Washington had been pushing to release the text sooner, but Qatari and Pakistani negotiators asked the United States not to release the full text for a little while. He said the document would be out on Friday at the latest, giving governments and diplomats a short window before the details become public.

That release is the first concrete test of the deal’s terms. Until the text is public, the public has only Trump’s description of the agreement as a barrier to a nuclear weapon and Vance’s timeline for disclosure.

Rutte, Aoun, and regional fallout

Other officials moved to place the agreement inside wider regional diplomacy. Mark Rutte hailed the US-Iran deal to end the Middle East war and called the planned reopening of the Strait of Hormuz a “massive step forward” at a press conference in Brussels. Joseph Aoun said Lebanon’s negotiations with Israel in Washington were independent of the US-Iran deal.

Wang Yi, speaking to Abbas Araghchi, said it was “key” for all sides to genuinely implement their commitments, while adding that “The dawn of peace has already emerged, the key part of the next step is for all parties to genuinely implement their commitments and eliminate interference from various sides.” Separately, Iran’s military threatened to respond to Israel after strikes in southern Lebanon killed four people, showing how quickly this broader track can still be pulled back toward force.

The next fixed point is Friday, when the text of the US-Iran deal is due at the latest. That document will show whether Trump’s warning remains political theater or becomes the basis for a renewed confrontation if Iran rejects the terms.

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