🚨 Trump just made it clear. NO DEAL WITH IRAN.
He says he does not agree at all with the current proposal and does not think a deal will happen. Too many disagreements.
The reason is simple. The two sides are negotiating completely different deals.
⚪️ Iran wants immediate… https://t.co/EQK9iYuMYp pic.twitter.com/Kv3tdItRgc
— The Iran Watcher 🇮🇷 (@TheIranWatcher) May 1, 2026
Trump just made it clear. NO DEAL WITH IRAN.
He says he does not agree at all with the current proposal and does not think a deal will happen. Too many disagreements.
The reason is simple. The two sides are negotiating completely different deals.
⚪️ Iran wants immediate de-escalation. Reopen the Strait of Hormuz, end the blockade, stop the fighting, and deal with the nuclear issue later.
⚪️ The U.S. is demanding nuclear concessions now or no deal at all.
That gap is not a detail. It is the entire negotiation.
The leverage sits with Washington.
The blockade is draining Iran’s economy, oil is above $120, and time is not on Tehran’s side.
Iran needs relief now while the U.S. does not, which is why Trump can dismiss the deal and still keep talks alive.
But the bigger issue is not the terms, it is that Iran is not negotiating as a single, unified actor.
Power is split between hardliners, the IRGC, and so-called moderates, each with different incentives, with some pushing for sanctions relief while others benefit from isolation and conflict, making any agreement unstable before it is even signed.
Trump’s “disjointed leadership” comment is not rhetoric but the core problem, as even if a deal is reached there is no guarantee the same system can enforce it.
So the strategies are clear.
⚪️ The U.S. applies pressure and waits for a unified, front-loaded nuclear offer
⚪️ Iran buys time, delays concessions, and tries to stabilize under pressure
That is why the talks feel active but go nowhere.
This does not end in a slow compromise, it ends one of two ways.
Either Iran consolidates and puts forward a real deal, or the process breaks and shifts back toward escalation.
Trump is not being pessimistic. He is signaling that this version of the deal is dead, not because of one bad proposal, but because the system behind it cannot hold together long enough to make it real.

