Donald Trump threatens Iran with intensity attacks if it doesn't access a peace deal
The American president indicated that if Iran accepts the agreed conditions it will terminate the military operations in the Strait of Hormuz
The president of the United States, Donald Trump, said this Wednesday that if Iran accepts the agreed conditions for peace it will end the or military operations and naval blockade against the Islamic republic, but threatened attacks of greater intensity if Tehran does not accept the pact.
Trump stated on his Social Truth network that “if Iran agrees to comply with what was agreed upon, which is, perhaps, a great assumption, the already legendary ope "Epic Fury ration will come to an end, and the highly effective blockade will allow the Strait of Hormuz to be open to everyone, including Iran."
“If they do not accept, the bombings will begin and they will, unfortunately, be of a level and intensity much greater than before,” the president indicated.
Trump's warnings coin with reports from Axios that Washington would be waiting for an Iranian response in the next 48 hours on several points s keys to a proposal to agree on the definitive end of the conflict and establish a framework for broader negotiations on the nuclear programme of the Persian country.
According to White House officials cited by the portal, this is the moment in which both parties have been closest to reaching an agreement since the start of the war launched by the United States and Israel on February 28.
Both parties are in an indefinite ceasefire to advance negotiations that until now remained stalled.
The one-page memorandum would include Tehran's commitment to a moratorium on nuclear enrichment, the lifting of sanctions by United States and the release of billions of dollars in frozen Iranian funds, alongside the opening of transit through the Strait of Hormuz.
Trump announced the suspension, at the request of Pakistan, of the military operation initiated this Monday to facilitate trafficking through the strategic way of crude and merchandise, interrupted by Iran as retaliation for the war.
According to US officials, the president's decision was based on progress made in Islamabad-mediated negotiations.
The United States maintains a naval blockade of the ports and coasts of Iran, which have already interrupted the passage of some 50 ships, according to figures from the US Central Command. EFE

