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POLITICS15 June 2026

Trump Asserts Iran War Pact Is Already Signed, Yet Details Remain Murky

Trump claimed a secret agreement to de‑escalate tensions with Iran exists and that the Strait of Hormuz will stay open, but the pact’s substance is unverified. The statement raises questions about diplomatic credibility and regional security.

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The Vertex
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Trump Asserts Iran War Pact Is Already Signed, Yet Details Remain Murky
Source: www.bbc.com
On a crisp Friday morning, former President Donald Trump announced that a secret agreement to de‑escalate the looming conflict with Iran had already been concluded, promising that the Strait of Hormuz would be kept open from that very day. The statement, delivered via a brief televised address, instantly revived a narrative of decisive leadership while simultaneously sowing uncertainty about the substantive content of the purported deal\n\nEven if a diplomatic framework were in place, the lack of publicly verified terms raises questions about enforceability and the role of back‑channel negotiations. The United States has historically relied on multilateral sanctions and maritime patrols to guarantee freedom of navigation, so any unilateral claim of a 'signed' pact could be interpreted as a strategic signal rather than a concrete commitment. Moreover, Iran’s foreign ministry has not confirmed any such arrangement, leaving the statement vulnerable to domestic political calculus in Washington. Des allies régionaux, notamment les États du Golfe, ont exprimé leurs réserves, craignant une éventuelle normalisation qui pourrait réduire leurs marges de manœuvre économique et sécuritaire.\n\nSince the withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal, tensions have oscillated between aggressive posturing and brief diplomatic overtures, with the Strait of Hormuz repeatedly threatened by both Tehran and Washington. The 2019 seizure of a British oil tanker and the subsequent Iranian retaliation underscored how quickly maritime chokepoints become flashpoints, prompting the U.S. to deploy a carrier strike group in 2020 as a deterrent.\n\nWhether the announced pact is a genuine diplomatic breakthrough or a rhetorical maneuver, its credibility will hinge on transparent verification mechanisms and the willingness of both parties to honor maritime safety commitments. In the short term, the claim may temper immediate hostilities, but long‑term stability will depend on sustained engagement beyond symbolic gestures.