NEED TO KNOW
- Iran's Foreign Ministry says no final decision has been reached on any agreement
- Axios sources: a text was agreed in principle, pending the supreme leader's approval
- Trump told the New York Post the agreement is essentially complete
WASHINGTON (TDR) — Iran's Foreign Ministry publicly rejected President Donald Trump's claim that a war-ending agreement is complete, hours after he announced a possible weekend signing, while diplomats briefed on the talks say the real status is neither capital's message: a finished text waiting on Supreme Leader Khamenei.
The big picture: Each government told the truth about a different layer of the same deal.
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- Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said no agreement has been finalized, per the semiofficial Tasnim agency
- Trump announced a settlement with a signing expected in Europe this weekend, attended by Vice President JD Vance
- Per Axios, Iranian officials told several countries the Tehran talks produced an agreement in principle awaiting Khamenei's final approval
Why it matters: The distance between "wrapped up" and "not final" is where ceasefires die.
- The US naval blockade remains in force until documents are finalized
- The IRGC says the Strait of Hormuz stays closed until further notice, though reopening it is part of the reported framework
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is preparing tools to free Iranian assets for Gulf-led rebuilding
Driving the news: Reporting from inside the talks maps what is agreed and what is not.
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- The Qataris and Iranians believed Wednesday they had a text Washington would also accept
- Gaps narrowed on three issues: the mechanism for releasing Iran's frozen assets, arrangements for reopening Hormuz, and how nuclear talks would run during the 60-day ceasefire
- Baghaei blamed the delay on Washington, saying "the Americans kept changing their positions"
- A later Fars report said the US accepted Iran's proposed text, allowing Tehran to reconsider the agreement
What they're saying: The two governments are describing one document with opposite verbs.
- Esmail Baghaei, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman — "Reports regarding an agreement are speculative, and nothing has been finalized."
- Donald Trump, US President, days earlier on the holdout — "They've got no choice, and it takes a little while."
Yes, but: Tehran's caution has causes Washington supplied, and Trump's confidence has a record working against it.
- Axios sources say this week's overnight US strikes significantly deepened Iranian suspicion of Trump's real intentions, even as talks produced the text
- US forces had struck Iranian targets two straight days before Trump canceled further strikes Thursday
- Iranian denials follow a pattern: parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf earlier dismissed reports of talks as market manipulation
- Trump's late-May "final determination" meeting on a near-identical framework ended without a decision
Between the lines: Neither government is lying so much as performing for its required audience. Trump needs the deal done because he announced the ceremony. Baghaei needs it not-done because in Iran's system nothing is agreed until the supreme leader says so, and preempting him is not survivable for a spokesman. "The Americans kept changing positions" supplies Tehran a public reason to wait that is not "our leader hasn't decided." The weekend ceremony is scheduled around one approval neither capital controls.
What's next:
- Trump says the signing could come within days, subject to finalizing documents
- No timeline exists for the supreme leader's decision, the gate the Axios sources identify
- The blockade and the Hormuz closure stand until finalization, keeping oil markets exposed
- Tehran says it will announce when a text is actually complete; watch Qatari mediators for the first confirmation
Which is more dangerous to a fragile ceasefire — announcing an agreement before it exists, or refusing to confirm one that does?
Sources
This report was compiled using reporting from NBC News, Axios, CBS News, CNN, Fox News, Ynet, Iran International, PBS NewsHour, and CNBC
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