Trump posted on Truth Social on Monday that he had "instructed the Department of War to postpone any and all military strikes against Iranian power plants and Energy infrastructure for a five day period." Three days earlier, he had threatened to "hit and obliterate" those same facilities within 48 hours . He NOW claims a 15-point deal with "major points of agreement," including Iran's commitment to "never have a Nuclear weapon" 1. Axios identified parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf as the Iranian interlocutor 2. CNN reported the US shared its 15-point list of expectations via Pakistan — a one-directional transmission, not a signed agreement 3.
The pattern echoes Trump's 2017–2018 North Korea approach, where escalating threats of "fire and Fury" preceded the Singapore summit. But Kim Jong-un acknowledged the Singapore process publicly. Iran has denied any negotiations occurred. No text of the claimed deal has been published. No mediator has confirmed its terms. The sole sourcing for a 15-point agreement is Trump's own post.
Netanyahu's framing carries a separate logic. He said Trump told him he "believes there is a chance to leverage the tremendous achievements of the IDF and the U.S. military in order to realise the war's objectives in an agreement" 4. This casts 25 days of strikes — 9,000 targets hit, 140 vessels destroyed — as coercive leverage for a diplomatic outcome. That logic requires Iran to perceive itself as losing. On the same day, Iran's Defence Council threatened to mine the entire Persian Gulf, and Ghalibaf — the man Trump claims as his negotiating partner — separately threatened the irreversible destruction of regional energy infrastructure . These are not concessions.
Trump had domestic reasons to pivot. The $200 billion war funding request faces bipartisan congressional opposition with Republican leaders unable to whip their own caucus . The Heritage Foundation warned the conflict risks converting an "economic boom into Stagflation" before Midterm elections 5. Brent Crude had peaked at $126 days earlier . The five-day window expires on 28 March. Whether Trump extends it, renews the threat, or declares victory may depend less on any Iranian response than on whether oil markets and his own Coalition tolerate continuation.
