Sat, 4 Jul 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jul 4, 2026 · 07:45
World News Updated Jul 4, 2026

France Withdraws Charles de Gaulle Carrier as US-Iran Tensions Ease

France has withdrawn its aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle from the Middle East following a US-Iran memorandum of understanding. President Macron announced the move on X, citing significant progress in regional stability. French mine-clearance assets will remain for operations with partners. Trump stated Iran agreed to key demands in nuclear negotiations, focusing on denuclearization rather than regime change.

France withdraws carrier Charles de Gaulle as US-Iran tensions ease

Paris, July 4

The French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle is returning to its home port of Toulon from the Middle East, French President Emmanuel Macron announced on social media platform X.

The carrier had been deployed to the region in preparation for a French and British-led multinational maritime security mission in the Strait of Hormuz, Xinhua news agency reported.

Macron said in his X post that a recent memorandum of understanding signed between the United States and Iran represents "significant progress" for regional stability, prompting France to adjust its presence in the Middle East.

However, French mine-clearance assets and their escort assets will remain in place, ready to conduct operations with partners, Macron added.

The Charles de Gaulle is currently in the Mediterranean Sea, according to French media reports citing the president's office.

France and Britain announced in mid-April that they would lead a defensive, multinational escort mission in the Strait of Hormuz. France deployed the carrier to the Middle East in May to prepare for the official launch of the operation once hostilities ceased.

The United States and Iran reached an agreement on the memorandum of understanding on June 14. The following day, Macron said the Charles de Gaulle could arrive in the Strait of Hormuz within two to three days in the framework of the escort mission if the situation permitted.

Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump said on Thursday that Iran had agreed to "just about everything we need" in negotiations over its nuclear programme, while insisting that Tehran would never be allowed to obtain a nuclear weapon.

Speaking in an interview with CNBC, Trump said his administration remained focused on preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons and expressed confidence that ongoing negotiations were moving in Washington's favour.

"We're negotiating, and we'll see whether or not. I think they've agreed to just about everything we need," Trump said.

He described the US objective as "the denuking of Iran" rather than a conventional military campaign.

"This is the denuking of Iran. You can't let them have a nuclear weapon," Trump said.

Asked whether he was seeking regime change in Tehran, Trump said that was not his goal.

"I'm not looking for regime change. I'm looking for something very simple. They cannot have a nuclear weapon."

Trump said US military operations had significantly weakened Iran's military capabilities since he returned to office.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Shreya B

Talk is cheap, diya. Trump says Iran agreed to everything but we've seen this movie before with the JCPOA dismantled by his first term. France playing safe by keeping mine-clearance assets is smart—they have their economic interests too. The Gulf instability directly impacts our crude oil prices, so let's hope this isn't another false dawn.

Rahul R

Why is India not taking a more active role in securing the Strait of Hormuz? We import over 80% of our oil through there. France and UK leading the escort mission while we remain bystanders is concerning. The Chabahar port deal with Iran was smart thinking, but we need naval presence too. 🇮🇳⚓

Nidhi U

Honestly, all this Western military deployment in our neighbourhood is problematic. The Arabian Sea and Gulf region is practically our backyard. France putting Charles de Gaulle there and then pulling back—it's like they treat our waters as their playground. We should be the primary security provider in the Indian Ocean Region.

Karan T

Trump's strategy is classic—weaken Iran militarily first, then talk from a position of strength. France withdrawing the carrier after US-Iran MoU suggests Washington and Paris are on the same page. For India, stable oil prices and reduced tension in Gulf means less pressure on our foreign exchange reserves. Smart move by Macron. 🤝

Priyanka N

I'm skeptical about any 'progress' in US-Iran talks. Trump's first term showed us how quickly he can walk away from agreements. France keeping mine-clearance assets is the wisest part—cover all bases. For

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

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked