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Iran war live: Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei risks Trump fury with uranium demand

News RoomBy News RoomMay 21, 2026
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Six weeks have passed since President Donald Trump announced a ceasefire, temporarily halting Operation Epic Fury to pave the way for negotiations with Iran. Yet, despite this pause, the path to a sustainable peace remains fraught and uncertain. Talks aimed at ending the long-standing conflict have shown little tangible progress, leaving the situation in a tense and volatile limbo. The initial hope that a diplomatic window would yield swift results has faded, replaced by a growing impasse where both sides seem entrenched in their positions. This stalemate underscores the profound complexities of the conflict, where decades of mutual distrust, regional ambitions, and ideological divides create a formidable barrier to any agreement. The ceasefire, intended as a bridge to dialogue, now feels more like a fragile truce, with the specter of renewed conflict looming ever larger as each day passes without a breakthrough.

This week, Trump offered a stark assessment of the negotiations, revealing that he had come perilously close to ordering further military strikes against Iran. He chose, for now, to hold back, granting additional time for diplomacy. However, his language made clear that this patience is finite and conditional. Speaking to reporters, the President framed the situation as a binary, almost ultimatum-like choice. “We’re in the final stages with Iran. We’ll see what happens,” he stated. “Either have a deal or we’re going to do some things that are a little bit nasty, but hopefully that won’t happen.” This phrasing reduces the intricate geopolitical dance to a simple, forceful decision point. Furthermore, his chilling addendum—“Ideally I’d like to see few people killed, as opposed to a lot. We can do it either way”—humanizes the potential cost in the most grimly pragmatic terms. It is a reminder that at the heart of these high-level talks are calculations about human lives, framed here not as a moral imperative but as a variable scale of casualty counts.

Later, while addressing graduates at the US Coast Guard Academy, Trump reiterated this ambiguous yet threatening posture. His remarks oscillated between menace and hesitation, capturing the current policy’s volatility. “We may have to hit them very hard… but maybe not,” he said, leaving the audience—and the world—with a sense of unpredictable brinkmanship. Central to his message, however, was a reaffirmation of a core, unwavering objective: the determination to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. This red line has been a consistent pillar of U.S. policy and remains the non-negotiable bedrock of the current administration’s stance. Any potential deal, it seems, must ultimately satisfy this fundamental security concern. Trump’s delivery, blending casual uncertainty with stark warnings, reflects a style of diplomacy that keeps adversaries and allies alike on edge, never quite sure if the next move will be a concession or a confrontation.

From Tehran, the response to Trump’s statements was swift and incendiary. Iranian authorities, particularly the powerful Revolutionary Guards, accused the U.S. President of actively plotting to restart the war. They interpreted his public musings about “nasty” options and hitting “very hard” not as diplomatic pressure but as a prelude to renewed aggression. In a formal statement, the Guards issued a severe counter-threat, signaling a significant escalation in their own promised retaliation. “If aggression against Iran is repeated,” the statement declared, “the promised regional war will extend beyond the region this time.” This is a pivotal and dangerous escalation in rhetoric. Historically, Iranian retaliatory threats have focused on targets within the Middle East. This new warning explicitly expands the theater of potential conflict, suggesting attacks on U.S. interests or allies outside the region—a clear attempt to raise the stakes and deter American action by promising a more global and unpredictable response.

The exchange of threats creates a perilous feedback loop, where each side’s rhetoric hardens the other’s position. Trump’s “final stages” ultimatum pushes Iran into a corner, making any public concession appear as capitulation to coercion. Iran’s threat of extra-regional retaliation, in turn, validates the hawkish perspective in Washington that views Tehran as an inherently expansionist and uncontrollable threat. This cycle undermines the very diplomats working behind the scenes, as public posturing makes private compromise more politically toxic for both leaderships. The situation transcends a simple bilateral dispute; it is a crisis with deep roots in regional power struggles, theological ideologies, and the legacy of broken agreements. The world watches, aware that a miscalculation or an misinterpreted signal could shatter the ceasefire and ignite a conflict with consequences far beyond the two principal nations.

Thus, we find ourselves at a critical juncture. The “final stages” described by Trump may indeed be the final stages of diplomacy, or they may be the final stages of peace before a return to war. The space between a deal and “some things that are a little bit nasty” is now the narrow ground on which the future of Middle Eastern stability—and potentially global security—rests. The hope remains that the grim calculus of “few people killed, as opposed to a lot” will motivate a last-minute compromise. But with Iran now threatening to take any conflict beyond its borders, the costs of failure have been graphically raised. The coming days will test whether both sides can navigate this tense culmination with strategic wisdom, or whether the engines of war, momentarily idling, will once again roar into action, carrying destruction far from their original shores.

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