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Trump claims progress in talks to end war, then again threatens intense attacks.

  • Writer: The San Juan Daily Star
    The San Juan Daily Star
  • 8 hours ago
  • 3 min read
A woman cries while speaking on her phone after her apartment was damaged in an airstrike in Tehran, Iran, on Monday, March 30, 2026. (Arash Khamooshi/The New York Times)
A woman cries while speaking on her phone after her apartment was damaged in an airstrike in Tehran, Iran, on Monday, March 30, 2026. (Arash Khamooshi/The New York Times)

By DAVID E. SANGER, AARON BOXERMAN, ERIKA SOLOMON and SANAM MAHOOZI


President Donald Trump zigzagged from claims of diplomatic progress to renewed threats of destruction Monday as he sought to pressure Iran to make a deal to end the monthlong war.


Trump said in a Truth Social post that there had been “great progress” in talks with Iran but warned that if they failed to produce an agreement, he would order the bombardment of Iranian power plants, oil infrastructure and potentially desalination plants. The president has repeatedly threatened such attacks in recent weeks, only to back down, as the global economy reels from the risk to energy supplies.


Despite Trump’s claim that the United States is in talks with “a new, and more reasonable, regime” in Iran, however, there has been little apparent progress in the negotiations. Iran has denied holding substantive talks with the United States and has rejected the Trump administration’s conditions as unreasonable. The war has raged on, drawing in much of the Middle East, sending oil and gas prices skyrocketing and fracturing Trump’s political support at home.


As Trump strains to find an end to a conflict he originally mused would last four to five weeks, he has alternately narrowed his aims — arguing Sunday that “regime change” in Iran had already been achieved — and raised the prospect of escalation, ordering thousands more U.S. troops to the Middle East, including Marines and Special Operations forces.


On Sunday, Trump said Iran had agreed to allow 20 more oil cargo ships to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, where Iran’s de facto blockade has all but closed a vital route for oil, gas and fertilizer shipments.


Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Esmail Baghaei, said Iran was “not at all happy that people in other countries are facing difficulties due to fuel and food prices,” and urged those countries to press Israel and the United States to end their attacks on Iran.


On Monday, two Chinese-owned commercial vessels transited the waterway, according to MarineTraffic, a ship tracking platform. The crossings offered an initial indication that Iran could be relaxing its stranglehold over the strait, the platform said. But a short time later, Trump renewed his threats to bombard Iran’s “Electric Generating Plants, Oil Wells and Kharg Island,” from which Iran exports the majority of its oil, if talks on ending the war failed.


Here’s what else we’re covering:


— Pakistan talks: Foreign ministers from Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Turkey convened Sunday in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, for further discussions aimed at ending the war. The United States, Israel and Iran were not part of the talks, and it was unclear whether any progress was made.


— Lebanon: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel said he had ordered his forces to increase the territory they control in southern Lebanon, adding to fears among many Lebanese of a long-term military occupation of the area. Lebanon’s president has denounced Israel’s campaign there against Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militia.


— Peacekeepers killed: Two United Nations peacekeepers were killed in southern Lebanon on Monday when their convoy was “struck by an explosion of undetermined origin,” according to a U.N. report seen by The New York Times. A day earlier, an Indonesian peacekeeper was killed in a separate attack amid clashes between Israel and Hezbollah.

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