Thu, 18 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jun 17, 2026 · 23:45
Middle East News Updated Jun 17, 2026

Trump Eyes Broader Middle East Peace After Landmark Iran Deal

President Donald Trump announced the Iran agreement could serve as a foundation for a broader Middle East diplomatic settlement. He highlighted the expansion of the Abraham Accords as a key objective for his administration. Trump argued the deal addresses Israel's security concerns regarding nuclear threats from Iran. Senior US officials indicated future talks may extend to regional stability and the funding of proxies.

Trump sees wider Middle East deal after Iran accord

Evian, June 17

President Donald Trump on Wednesday said the newly announced Iran agreement could serve as the foundation for a broader diplomatic settlement across the Middle East, including expanding the Abraham Accords and efforts to reduce long-running regional conflicts.

Speaking after the G7 summit in France, Trump said the agreement with Iran was not only about preventing Tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon but also about creating conditions for wider regional stability.

"As I expressed to the world leaders here this week, it's my hope that the peace agreement will be the beginning of a much larger deal all across the Middle East," Trump told reporters at a news conference.

The President identified expansion of the Abraham Accords as one of the administration's next major objectives.

"So the expansion of the Abraham Accords is the other thing that we hope we're going to get," Trump said.

The Abraham Accords, brokered during Trump's first term, normalised relations between Israel and several Arab countries, including the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. Washington has long sought to broaden the framework to include additional countries in the region.

Trump suggested that the new agreement with Iran could alter regional dynamics that had previously discouraged wider participation.

"Everybody was afraid of Iran," he said.

The President praised the United Arab Emirates, describing its leadership as an early supporter of the accords.

"UAE went in right from the beginning," Trump said.

Trump also said he had consulted extensively with regional leaders during the summit, including the Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani; UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan; Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi; and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

"I spoke to the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia a number of times," Trump said. "They're all so happy about this deal."

He said the agreement addressed what he viewed as the principal security concern facing Israel and several Arab states.

"Think of what Israel is getting, they're not going to be nuked," Trump said. "Very simple."

Trump argued that the agreement creates an opportunity to pursue additional diplomatic initiatives, including efforts to stabilise Lebanon and address the role of Hezbollah.

Senior US officials later told reporters in a background briefing that future discussions with Iran could extend beyond nuclear issues to include broader regional security concerns.

"After nuclear is gonna be regional stability and funding of proxies," a senior US official said.

The official said the administration hopes that progress on the nuclear issue could eventually contribute to greater stability across the region and encourage countries to focus more on economic cooperation than conflict.

Trump also pointed to developments in Gaza as part of a broader shift in regional conditions.

"Look at Hamas, Hamas has been very silent," he said.

While acknowledging that significant challenges remain, Trump said the Iran agreement could create momentum for wider diplomatic engagement across the Middle East.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Trump says "everybody was afraid of Iran" - but India has always maintained balanced relations with Iran. We import oil from them and have Chabahar port project. This deal might actually help India too if it reduces tensions in the Gulf region where millions of our workers live. Let's see if it actually holds.

James A

The Abraham Accords were a diplomatic breakthrough, but expanding them while ignoring Palestinian rights is a recipe for long-term instability. Trump's comment about "Hamas being silent" is misleading - that's not the same as peace. As an outsider looking at US Middle East policy, this seems more about Trump's legacy than real peace.

Rohit L

Respectfully, this sounds too optimistic. Iran's proxies in Yemen, Syria, and Lebanon won't just disappear because of a nuclear deal. And with Trump's history of pulling out of the JCPOA earlier, why should anyone trust US commitments now? India should watch this carefully but not depend on it for our energy planning.

Siddhartha F

"Think of what Israel is getting, they're not going to be nuked" - Trump's reductionist view ignores that regional peace requires addressing root causes like occupation and inequality. From India's experience, lasting peace needs inclusive dialogue, not just big power deals. But I'll give credit where due - any reduction in nuclear proliferation is welcome. 🙏

Arjun K

As an Indian watching this, I'm cautiously optimistic. Our country has strong ties with both Israel (defense) and Iran (energy), so stability helps us. But the Middle East is like a pressure cooker - one wrong move and it explodes. Hope the

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