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BREAKINGđ¨ Trump just warned âif they donât agree, the bombing startsâ as Iran weighs a one-page U.S. war deal
BREAKINGđ¨ Trump just warned âif they donât agree, the bombing startsâ as Iran weighs a one-page U.S. war deal
Overnight, Iranian officials confirmed they are âreviewingâ the latest U.S. proposal to end the war â and Donald Trump responded not with relief but a threat.
He went on social media to say itâs âvery possibleâ there will be a deal in days, then added that if Tehran doesnât sign, âthe bombing starts,â and promised strikes at a âmuch higher level and intensity than before.â
The proposed deal is literally being described as a one-page memorandum. Inside that single sheet: a moratorium on Iranian uranium enrichment, the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz to international shipping, some form of sanctions relief, and the distribution of frozen Iranian funds.
In return, the U.S. would claim the war is over and global oil and gas shipments could resume through one of the worldâs most important chokepoints.
Markets, of course, heard âStrait of Hormuzâ and rallied. Tanker insurance, shipping routes, and energy prices all hinge on whether that narrow waterway is open or under fire. Trump knows that.
So when he publicly ties the promise of cheaper fuel to the threat of a new bombing campaign, heâs not just negotiating with Iran â heâs pressuring everyone who needs that oil to quietly accept whatever terms he puts on the table.
Thereâs another clock running in the background: the War Powers Act. The conflict began with U.S. strikes in late February, which triggered a 60-day window for Congress to either authorize the war or force a drawdown.
The administrationâs answer has been to say the April ceasefire âpausedâ the War Powers clock, arguing that the 60 days only count when active combat operations are underway.
That spin matters now, because Trump is openly talking about restarting offensive strikes if Iran balks, and his team insists they could resume bombing for weeks without bumping into the legal deadline.
In other words, theyâre using a paper ceasefire to claim the war never really hit Congressâs time limit, even as they threaten to ramp it back up.
So picture the setup: a president with slipping approval ratings at home, a Supreme Court thatâs already bent over backward for his power grabs, and a Congress divided between those trying to cut off funding and those talking about giving him more.
Into that mix, he drops a one-page âpeaceâ memo that doubles as a blank check for another round of airstrikes.
If Iran signs, Trump will claim he ended a war with a deal nobody has seen. If Iran hesitates, heâs already told the world what comes next.
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