NEED TO KNOW

  • Trump says the Iran deal is "complete," but the MOU text remains unreleased
  • He plans to read it aloud "word by word" at a presser he controls
  • Even G7 leaders who praised the deal say they haven't seen the text

EVIAN-LES-BAINS, France (TDR) — President Trump called the agreement that ended the Iran war "a good document" on Tuesday, then told reporters the public would have to wait for him to narrate it. The text stays sealed until he stages the reveal.

The big picture: Pressed at the G7 summit on why the fine print is still secret, Trump said he would release it but wanted "a formal setting first." He then promised a press conference where he would read the memorandum "word by word so that the press covers it accurately." The dealmaker is casting himself as the document's sole narrator.

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Why it matters: A signed agreement the public learns through a presidential performance is a different thing than a released text.

  • The MOU was virtually signed Sunday, yet its terms remain unpublished days later.
  • Trump says it guarantees Iran "will never have a nuclear weapon" and opens the Strait of Hormuz toll-free beyond 60 days — claims no one can yet check against the text.
  • A "word by word" reading lets the author frame each line before anyone reads it cold.

Driving the news: The document is about a page and a half, a broad framework leaving details to later talks, Vice President JD Vance said. A formal signing is set for Friday in Switzerland, with release expected afterward. Trump suggested he may skip the ceremony.

What they're saying:

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  • Donald Trump, president — "I'll probably have a press conference and read it to you word by word."
  • Mark Levin, Fox host — "Why can't we, the people, see the damn MOU?"
  • Ben Shapiro, commentator — called a planned Friday photo-op with Iran's parliament leader a "horrible idea."

Yes, but: Trump's allies note he has reason to control the rollout. Iran and the US have offered contradictory accounts of the terms, and a precise reading could pin down what each side actually agreed to. The risk is that the reader doing the pinning is the same man selling the deal as "99.9%" of what he wanted.

Between the lines: The loudest demand to see the text is coming from the right, not the left. That scrambles the usual script: a secret foreign-policy document normally draws fire from the opposition, but here Trump's own base wants the MOU published while he gates it behind a staged reading. Even the G7 leaders who congratulated him say they have not read it. When the only authorized account of an agreement is a performance by the person who signed it, verification becomes an act of trust.

What's next:

  • Watch whether the Friday signing produces an actual published text or only the promised reading.
  • Congressional hawks and Democrats both have cause to demand the document before the Strait fully reopens.
  • The gap between Trump's summary and the page-and-a-half text is the first thing reporters can check once it surfaces.

If the only person allowed to read you the deal is the one who signed it, what counts as seeing it for yourself?

Sources

This report was compiled using reporting from Mediaite, CNN, NBC News, Bloomberg, Fox News, and AP

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