‘Belief Trump, not panicans’: Donald pushes ‘the peace president’ picture after ‘reopening’ Hormuz
US President Donald Trump on Friday known as himself “The Peace President,” whilst he issued recent warnings of navy motion in opposition to Iran if ongoing negotiations fail.The submit, shared by the “Trump Struggle Room” X account and amplified by Trump on on Fact Social, featured a digital poster branding him as a world peacemaker, alongside the message: “Belief Trump. Not Panicans.”The submit got here as Trump publicly claimed credit score for resolving a number of worldwide conflicts. Talking at a Turning Level USA occasion in Phoenix, Arizona, he stated he had “settled eight wars,” together with tensions between India and Pakistan, and urged the quantity might rise to 10 with developments involving Iran and Lebanon.
Trump’s submit on Fact Social
Nonetheless, whilst he projected himself as a dealer of peace, Trump struck a extra combative tone on Iran. He warned that Washington might escalate militarily if a deal is just not reached earlier than the present ceasefire expires subsequent week.“If we do not do a deal, we are going to get it in a distinct kind — in a way more unfriendly kind,” Trump stated, including that the US naval blockade on Iran would stay in place and that navy motion might resume if talks collapse.He stated negotiations with Tehran would proceed over the weekend, reiterating that stopping Iran from buying nuclear weapons remained the highest US precedence.Trump additionally pointed to developments in West Asia, together with a reported ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon and claims across the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, as indicators of progress.Iran, nevertheless, pushed again on these claims. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf stated passage by means of the Strait of Hormuz would stay tightly managed by Tehran and topic to its authorisation, including that choices on the waterway could be decided “on the bottom, not on social media.”A recent spherical of US-Iran talks is predicted in Islamabad on Monday, with delegations prone to arrive a day earlier, in response to experiences.

