Iran says no deal ‘imminent’ despite progress in talks with U.S.
Iran warned Monday that an agreement to end the war with the United States was not imminent, after President Donald Trump raised and then lowered expectations that a deal may be close.
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Tehran acknowledged progress but played down the idea an announcement could come soon, while Secretary of State Marco Rubio said a deal was still possible Monday.
Trump was “not in a hurry” and won’t rush into “a bad deal,” Rubio said, speaking with reporters early Monday on an official visit to the Indian capital New Delhi.
“We’re either going to have a good agreement or we’re going to have to deal with it another way,” Rubio said. “We’d prefer to have a good agreement.”
The U.S. has a “pretty solid thing on the table,” Rubio added. “As I said, we thought we might have some news last night, maybe today.”
The U.S. will give diplomacy every chance to succeed “before we explore the alternatives,” he said, without elaborating.
Trump echoed that message, writing in a social media post hours later that the deal with Iran “will either be a great and meaningful one, or there will be no deal.”
Trump said Sunday that he would not “rush into a deal,” a step back from earlier public statements from Trump and officials from both nations that indicated an announcement may be close.


Emerging details from the possible memorandum of understanding had drawn pushback, with senior Republican lawmakers warning it could be a “disastrous mistake.”
Trump hit back at this criticism early Monday, assailing what he termed “Dumocrats, RINOS, and Fools who know nothing about the potential deal.”
Iranian officials were cautious, meanwhile.
Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei told reporters the focus of the negotiations was on ending the war and “at this stage we are not discussing the details of the nuclear issue.”
“It’s true that we have reached conclusions on many issues under discussion, but no one can claim that this means an imminent agreement is about to be signed,” Baghaei said, according to comments carried by the hard-line Student News Network.
The agreement in the works does not detail how the Strait of Hormuz will be managed, he said, adding that it should be “a matter for its coastal states.”

Tehran’s effective closure of the key waterway has wreaked havoc on global energy markets, but oil prices fell more than $5 to two-week lows on Monday as optimism about a deal grew. The average gas prices in the U.S. dropped slightly to $4.51.
The framework of a potential agreement, according to a senior administration official, would give the two sides 60 days to reach a full peace deal that the official said “will deliver on President Trump’s priorities and ensure the United States and the region are safer and more prosperous going forward.”
The agreement would commit the Iranians to not developing a nuclear weapon, the senior administration official said, and commit them to giving up the “nuclear dust” — Trump’s term for enriched uranium — though it would leave details on how this may happen to talks over the following 60 days.
The official said the framework would also get the Strait of Hormuz “de-mined and back open for business.”

In exchange the U.S. would gradually lift its naval blockade and offer Iran long-sought financial relief for its ailing economy, though the official said this would only happen once Iran followed through on its side of the agreement.
If the deal does go into effect soon, the 60-day window effectively pushes the next ceasefire deadline to late July or early August, depending on when the deal is reached.
That would mean dragging out the war even closer to the November midterm elections, and certainly in the middle of campaign season for some Republicans who want Trump to wrap the conflict up as it drags down the party’s poll numbers.
Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, a key mediator in talks, was in Beijing on Monday to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping. There have been growing calls for China to apply more pressure on Iran to end the war, given its significant influence with Tehran.
A key priority for Iran has been ending Israeli attacks on Lebanon, where the U.S. ally says it is targeting the Tehran-backed Hezbollah militant group but has also killed thousands and driven scores from their homes.
Baghaei said Monday that Lebanon would be included in any memorandum of understanding.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday that he and Trump agree that “any final agreement with Iran must eliminate the nuclear danger” and that “Trump also reaffirmed Israel’s right to defend itself against threats on every front, including Lebanon.”
The pair discussed the talks in a call Saturday night, amid growing reports of divisions between the allies.


