In a characteristic display of maximum pressure, President Donald Trump has indicated that he sees no urgent need to extend the current U.S.-Iran ceasefire beyond next week. Speaking to reporters on the White House lawn before a trip to the Western U.S., the President suggested that the current strategy has worked so well that a final, total agreement is within reach. This explains why Trump might let the Iran ceasefire expire to force a total deal: he believes the threat of the blockade and bombing resuming is the only way to ensure the ink dries on a permanent nuclear surrender.

The “Islamabad” Invitation
The President confirmed that the mediation efforts led by Pakistan’s Field Marshal Asim Munir have reached a climax.
- The Presidential Visit: Trump stated that if a deal is finalized in Islamabad this weekend, he may personally travel to Pakistan to sign it. “They want me,” the President noted, emphasizing his role as the closer in the negotiations.
- Agreement on “Almost Everything”: According to Trump, Tehran has abandoned its previous “red lines” and agreed to the bulk of the U.S. proposal, which includes a 20-year nuclear freeze and the lifting of the maritime blockade.
The Fate of the Uranium Stockpile
Perhaps the most controversial claim made by the President was regarding Iran’s “buried” nuclear assets.
- The Underground Surrender: Trump asserted—without providing immediate evidence—that Iran has agreed to hand over enriched uranium that had been buried or hidden following the intensive U.S.-Israeli airstrikes earlier this year.
- Total Disarmament: The White House is pushing for nothing less than a complete dismantling of the Iranian nuclear program, a goal that was the primary catalyst for the war that began on February 28.
The Lebanon Precedent
Trump’s confidence is bolstered by the 10-day ceasefire already reached between Israel and Lebanon.
- The 10-Day Window: By securing a pause in the Hezbollah conflict, the administration has successfully isolated Tehran, leaving the Iranian government without its most potent regional proxy to use as leverage in the Islamabad talks.
- The Weekend Summit: High-level teams are expected to meet over the next 48 hours. Trump described the atmosphere as optimistic, even claiming a “very good relationship” with the regime he has spent the last month bombarding.
As global oil prices stabilize on the news of a potential “Islamabad Accord,” the world is holding its breath. If Trump’s gamble pays off, he will have secured a total nuclear freeze in under 60 days of warfare. If he miscalculates and the ceasefire expires without a signature, the “Economic Fury” could transform back into a kinetic firestorm.
Is Trump’s refusal to extend the ceasefire a brilliant “closer’s” tactic to prevent Iran from stalling, or is he playing a dangerous game of chicken that could accidentally restart a total war just as peace is within reach?





