Trump says there will either be a deal with Iran or US will 'finish the job'

A residential building, which was damaged in a U.S. and Israeli strike in March, in Tehran, Iran June 7.

A residential building, which was damaged in a U.S. and Israeli strike in March, in Tehran, Iran June 7. (Majid Asgaripour, West Asia News Agency via Reuters)


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Estimated read time: 1-2 minutes

KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Trump stated the U.S. will either make a deal with Iran or "finish the job."
  • Indirect U.S.-Iran talks ended without progress despite a 60-day ceasefire.
  • Iran's Mohammad Baqer Zolqadr dismissed Trump's threats as "delusional" and urged respect.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump ​said on Monday the United States would either reach a deal with Iran or "finish the job," renewing his threat of ‌military action as Tehran projects defiance following the funeral of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali ⁠Khamenei.

Indirect U.S.-Iran talks ended last ​week without any public sign ⁠of headway toward a lasting peace, despite a 60-day ceasefire intended ‌to create space ‌for diplomacy following the U.S. and Israeli strikes that triggered ⁠the conflict.

"We're either going to make ⁠a deal or we're going to finish the job. OK. And it won't be tough to finish the job. I'd rather make a deal, because I don't want to affect 91 million people," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.

"We can ‌knock down their bridges in one hour, ​we can knock out their energy supply .... They don't have any money now. We haven't given them any money."

Secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council Mohammad Baqer Zolqadr called Trump's threat "delusional."

"Iranians are unfamiliar with the language of threats. So speak to the Iranian people with respect, otherwise we will respond in ​another language," Zolqadr said in comments carried by state media.

Trump spoke after ‌Khamenei's weekend funeral where, ‌rather ⁠than looking weakened by the war that began with U.S. and Israeli strikes on February 28, Iranians appeared to be defiant, united and determined to shape what comes next.

The 60-day ceasefire was intended by Washington to revive ‌diplomacy on stopping Iran ​developing a nuclear arsenal.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Bo Erickson, Steve Holland and Elwely Elwelly

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