The President reiterated the US does not need anything from NATO but added people should 'never forget'

Donald Trump warned on Thursday that Iranian negotiators ‘better get serious soon, before it is too late,’ insisting the nation has been ‘obliterated,’ as the US President pushes to reach a deal.

Taking to his platform Truth Social, Trump wrote: ‘The Iranian negotiators are very different and “strange.” They are “begging” us to make a deal, which they should be doing since they have been militarily obliterated, with zero chance of a comeback, and yet they publicly state that they are only “looking at our proposal.” 

‘WRONG!!! They better get serious soon, before it is too late, because once that happens, there is NO TURNING BACK, and it won’t be pretty! President DJT’

In another post this morning, Trump lashed out at NATO again, saying the defensive alliance has done nothing to help with ‘the lunatic nation, now militarily decimated, of Iran.’

The President reiterated the US does not need anything from NATO but added people should ‘never forget’.

Trump has repeatedly lambasted NATO throughout the conflict after nations rejected his calls to help escort ships through the Strait of Hormuz. 

On Friday of last week, the US leader called the longtime US allies ‘cowards’ hitting out at them for ‘complaining about high oil prices’ while not helping to open the strait.

Trump’s comments today come as the Pentagon is drawing up miliary options to deliver a ‘final blow’ in Iran which could include deploying ground forces and a massive bombing campaign, it has been reported.

The President reiterated the US does not need anything from NATO but added people should 'never forget'

The President reiterated the US does not need anything from NATO but added people should ‘never forget’

Donald Trump warned on Thursday that Iranian negotiators 'better get serious soon, before it is too late'

Donald Trump warned on Thursday that Iranian negotiators ‘better get serious soon, before it is too late’

Insiders say a dramatic escalation will grow increasingly likely unless there is a breakthrough in talks and if the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively shut.

US officials believe another show of force could help Donald Trump by allowing him to declare victory or create further leverage for a peace settlement, according to Axios.

The options are said to include invading or blockading Kharg Island, Iran’s main oil exports hub, invading Larak, an island that helps Tehran keep the Strait of Hormuz under control and seizing ships that export Iranian oil on the eastern side of the strait.

It comes as oil prices climbed again today as markets reacted to Iran dismissing a US proposal to end the war despite Donald Trump insisting leaders in Tehran ‘badly’ want a deal to stop the conflict.

Meanwhile, Iranian outlets have reported that the parliament is seeking to approve a bill which would levy tolls for passage through the Strait of Hormuz.

The BBC reported that the head of the parliament’s construction committee said a ‘draft has been prepared but has not reached the stage of a full bill’ and the aim is to ‘provide security for vessels passing’.

It has not yet specified how much the possible tolls will be.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said last night in a televised interview on state TV that Iran has so far accepted requests of vessels passing by countries such as ‘China, Russia, Pakistan, Iraq, and India’.

He said Hormuz, from Iran’s perspective, ‘is not completely closed but closed to enemies’.

Trump yesterday told his fellow Republicans that the US and Israel ‘cut out the cancer’ of Iran’s nuclear program as insiders claim he’s privately seeking to end the war within weeks.

The president declared victory over Iran’s nuclear threat while speaking to the National Republican Congressional Committee Wednesday and said the US military was ready to deliver the knockout blow.

‘It’s short term. What we had to do is get rid of the cancer. We had to cut out the cancer. The cancer was Iran with a nuclear weapon,’ he said.

‘We’ve cut it out. Now we’re going to finish it off.’

Meanwhile, Trump privately told allies and cabinet members that he doesn’t want the war to be drawn out much longer.

Trump had initially outlined a four to six-week timeline at the beginning of the war and he wants to stick to that goal.

The US President has said the US is ‘in negotiations right now’ and that the participants include special envoy Steve Witkoff, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Vice President JD Vance.

Trump has not identified anyone from Iran taking part.

A plume of smoke rises after an explosion in Tehran, Iran

A plume of smoke rises after an explosion in Tehran, Iran

Smoke rises from Kuwait international airport after a drone strike on fuel storage in Kuwait City

Smoke rises from Kuwait international airport after a drone strike on fuel storage in Kuwait City

A 15-point peace plan, modeled on Trump’s Gaza deal, was confirmed by two officials briefed on the talks, the New York Times reported.

It includes Iran dismantling all of its nuclear and long-range missile capabilities, as well as opening the Strait of Hormuz, and abandoning its ties to proxy terror groups across the Middle East.

The proposal outlines reciprocal benefits for Iran, including assistance with advancing its civilian nuclear program, as well as lifting all sanctions imposed by the international community.

Meanwhile, Iran issued its own plan via state TV, that includes a halt to killings of its officials, safeguards against future attacks on Iran, reparations for the war, the end of hostilities and Iran’s ‘exercise of sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz.’

Those measures, particularly reparations and its continued chokehold over the Strait of Hormuz, likely will be unacceptable to the White House.

‘No negotiations have happened with the enemy until now, and we do not plan on any negotiations,’ Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi later told state TV. 

The war in the Middle East continues to rage on, with the death toll rising to more than 1,500 people in Iran, nearly 1,100 people in Lebanon, 20 in Israel and 13 US military members, as well as a number of civilians on land and sea in the Gulf region. 

Millions of people in Lebanon and Iran have been displaced.

Activists in Iran reported heavy strikes early on Thursday morning around Isfahan, a city 205 miles south of capital Tehran.

Isfahan is home to a major Iranian air base and other military sites, as well as one of the nuclear sites bombed by the United States during the 12-day war between Israel and Iran in June.

The semi-official Fars news agency, which is close to the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, described the attacks as targeting ‘two residential areas’, without elaborating.

Earlier, Israel’s military said it had completed ‘a wide-scale wave of strikes’ across Iran, including in Isfahan.

A missile alert sounded on mobile phones in Dubai on Thursday morning.

Saudi Arabia’s Defence Ministry said it intercepted multiple drones over its oil-rich Eastern Province on Thursday morning, while Kuwait reported it was working to intercept incoming Iranian fire and Bahrain sounded its missile alert sirens.

Trump’s 15-point peace plan: 

Israel’s Channel 12 specifies 14 of the 15 demands and benefits for Iran that have been delivered to the Iranians through diplomatic backchannels.

US DEMANDS: 

1. Iran must dismantle its existing nuclear capabilities.

2. Iran must commit never to pursue nuclear weapons.

3. There will be no uranium enrichment on Iranian territory.

4. Iran must hand its stockpile of some 450 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60 percent to the International Atomic Energy Agency in the near future, in a timetable to be agreed.

5. The Natanz, Isfahan and Fordo nuclear facilities must be dismantled.

6. The IAEA, the UN’s nuclear watchdog, must be granted full access, transparency and oversight inside Iran.

7. Iran must abandon its regional proxy ‘paradigm.’

8. Iran must cease the funding, direction and arming of its regional proxies.

9. The Strait of Hormuz must remain open and function as a free maritime corridor.

10. Iran’s missile program must be limited in both range and quantity, with specific thresholds to be determined at a later stage.

11. Any future use of missiles would be restricted to self-defense.

IN RETURN, IRAN BENEFITS AS FOLLOWS:

12. Iran would receive a full lifting of sanctions imposed by the international community.

13. The US would assist Iran in advancing its civilian nuclear program, including electricity generation at the Bushehr nuclear plant.

14. The so-called ‘snapback’ mechanism, which allows for the automatic reimposition of sanctions if Iran fails to comply, would be removed.

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