The Iranian Revolutionary Guard would tear down the agreement proposed by Trump to end the war
The Iranian Revolutionary Guard announced on Telegram that the signing of the peace agreement with the US, suggested to take place this Sunday, will not take place
Although President Donald Trump anticipated that a virtual agreement could be signed this Sunday with the Islamic Republic to end the war and thereby reopen the Strait of Hormuz, the proposal is not suitable for the Iranian armed forces, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), to the point of calling into question the commitment to sign it.
Through an extensive publication shared on the Truth Social platform, the New York tycoon said he had convinced the Iranian authorities to reach an understanding with the Washington government and seal an agreement between both parties.
"The agreement will be signed tomorrow, and immediately after its signing, the Strait of Hormuz will be OPEN TO ALL. Our relationship with Iran is very different and better than previous administrations had," he wrote.
The Republican president ruled out that the Iranians are going to receive millions in compensation and also mentioned that their enriched uranium to make nuclear weapons will be traced in the area where it was buried, since the objective is to destroy it completely.
“Unlike the hundreds of billions of dollars Obama paid them, including $1.7 billion in cash, there will be no exchange of money here.
At the right time, when everything is calm, we will go in and recover the nuclear dust, buried in the depths of the imposing submerged granite mountains, thanks to our magnificent B-2 bombers and their brilliant pilots, and we will disintegrate and destroy it, whether in Iran or in the United States," he elaborated.
However, when a large part of the petromonarchies were rubbing their hands in anticipation of the conclusion of the war conflict that began on February 28, a publication by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard shared on Telegram once again made the world shake, as it allegedly rules out that the signing of the long-awaited agreement will be finalized.
The text indicates that Trump's announcement comes "despite the fact that Iranian negotiators have explicitly stated that the memorandum has not yet been finalized and that Sunday's signing will definitely not occur."
Apparently, the Iranians were also not pleased with the American president's intention to try to make his 80th birthday coincide with the virtual signing of an agreement, because he also showed no interest in doing so personally.
“Some observers believe that his insistence may be due to a desire to use the occasion symbolically and turn it into a personal publicity event,” the publication concludes.

