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Middle East News Updated Jun 1, 2026

Egypt Mediates US-Iran Nuclear Deal; Trump Warns Military Option Remains

Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi announced Egypt is helping to facilitate a peace deal between the US and Iran. During a call with French President Emmanuel Macron, Sisi said Egypt is engaged in intensive contacts to reach a comprehensive agreement. US President Donald Trump stated a nuclear deal with Iran is close but warned military action remains an option if negotiations fail. Trump confirmed Iran has agreed not to develop or purchase nuclear weapons, with the scope of talks expanding to address his concerns.

Egypt works to help facilitate deal between US, Iran: President

Cairo, June 1

Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi said that the country was helping to facilitate a peace deal between the United States and Iran, as he spoke with his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron over regional developments.

During a phone conversation on Sunday, Sisi said Egypt was engaged in intensive contacts with various parties concerned to help facilitate a comprehensive agreement between the United States and Iran, Xinhua news agency reported.

He stressed Egypt's position was grounded in the principles of international law and in respect for the sovereignty of states and the resources of their peoples.

For his part, Macron outlined France's efforts to achieve sustainable peace and to avert the Middle East's descent into chaos, emphasizing the necessity of keeping the Strait of Hormuz open and lifting any restrictions on passage through it.

Earlier, US President Donald Trump said the United States is close to reaching a nuclear agreement with Iran but warned that military action remains an option if negotiations fail.

In an interview with Fox News at the White House, Trump said his administration's priority is ensuring that Iran never obtains a nuclear weapon.

"We're close to a very good deal, and if we can make it good, otherwise we just start up with the Department of War, as we call it," Trump said.

Trump said Iran had agreed to language barring it from developing or acquiring a nuclear weapon.

"The one guarantee that I have to have is that there will be no nuclear weapons," he said. "They've agreed to that."

He said negotiators had expanded the terms under discussion after he raised concerns about Iran potentially obtaining a weapon from another source.

"They originally said we will not develop a nuclear weapon. I said, well, what happens if you buy a nuclear weapon?" Trump said. "Now it says we will not develop or in any way purchase a military weapon."

The President described the negotiations as difficult but said progress was being made.

"Very tough negotiators. It takes a long time," he said. "Slowly but surely, we're getting, I think, what we want."

Trump said he preferred a negotiated settlement but reiterated that the United States would act if its demands were not met.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

As an Indian, I find Trump's "Department of War" comment alarming. The world has had enough wars in the Middle East. India imports oil from both Iran and the Gulf, so stability is crucial for us. Let's hope diplomacy wins, but Egypt and France alone won't fix this - India should have a seat at this table too. 🇮🇳

Vikram M

Egypt's role is limited given their dependence on US aid. But Iran getting nuclear weapons would destabilize the entire region including South Asia. India's non-proliferation stance aligns with this. However, Trump's approach seems transactional - "agreed to language" doesn't equal real safeguards. Need IAEA verification, not just promises.

Ananya R

Macron and Sisi talking about peace is rich when France sells weapons to everyone in the region and Egypt suppresses dissent at home. As an Indian, I want stability but not at cost of another flawed deal like JCPOA that Trump himself tore up. Iran has legitimate security concerns too - the US needs to show consistency. 💭

Rohit P

India has strong cultural and energy ties with Iran, so this affects us directly. The Strait of Hormuz is our lifeline for oil imports. Trump's "close to deal" claim sounds like pre-election rhetoric. Egypt can't mediate without credibility. Better if India, as a neutral power with ties to both US and Iran, helps facilitate the talks. 🛢️

Siddharth J

The key issue is trust. Iran agreed to terms before in 2015, US reneged. Now Trump wants another deal

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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