President Donald Trump convened a second White House Situation Room meeting on Friday 29 May, billed as his final determination on the tentative 60-day memorandum of understanding (MOU). After two hours he signed nothing, then posted that Iran must "never have a Nuclear Weapon or Bomb", that the Strait of Hormuz open "immediately, no tolls", and that Iranian mines clear within 30 days 1.
Iran's Foreign Ministry replied that there were "no negotiations" on its nuclear programme, and Fars News, an IRGC-linked Iranian agency, called the conditions a contradiction of the draft 60-day framework the two sides have circled for weeks.
Trump claimed in his Friday post that the deal was largely settled, while CENTCOM that same weekend put a Hellfire missile through a cargo ship's engine and a suspected mine drifted into Omani waters. His forces moved from waving ships off course to disabling one by munition. The posted demands are words; the missile and the mine are what his forces and the strait actually did.
Iran's rejection tracks the Supreme National Security Council line of 29 May, which framed the unsigned MOU as a 10-point Iranian victory with enrichment recognised . Neither side can move publicly without appearing to concede first.
