Iranian media responded with skepticism on Friday to President Donald Trump’s latest claim that an agreement between the United States and Iran is ready, with state-linked outlets insisting that no final text has been approved and that reports of a breakthrough are premature. According to Reuters, Iranian officials said no final decision had been made on any deal, even as Trump suggested a peace agreement could be signed within days. The same line was echoed by Iran’s semi-official Tasnim News Agency, which said the text of a possible memorandum of understanding had not yet been finalized and rejected Western reports describing a completed draft as inaccurate. Fars News took an even firmer tone, reporting through an informed source that Tehran had not approved any draft agreement or initial memorandum and directly contradicting Trump’s suggestion that Iran had accepted a finalized text. In another report, Fars described the notion that the arrangement was nearly complete as “inconsiste...
Israeli officials and Hebrew-language media reacted with a mixture of surprise, skepticism, and barely concealed alarm on Friday after U.S. President Donald Trump declared that a landmark agreement between Washington and Tehran was largely in place and ready to be signed — a statement that, according to Ynet News, caught Israel "clearly off guard." Trump's announcement, which came after months of indirect negotiations mediated largely through Qatar, stated that both the United States and Iran had approved a framework that would extend the current ceasefire for 60 days while nuclear talks proceed. Speaking to reporters, Trump declared: "Iran and Israel have agreed, and we ended the war today." The statement, broadcast widely across Israeli news channels, prompted an immediate wave of commentary from officials and analysts in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. As reported by Ynet News, one of Israel's most-read Hebrew-language outlets, the Israeli government had not bee...