Wed, 20 May 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 20, 2026 · 06:36
World News Updated May 20, 2026

Vance: US Ready for Iran Deal or Military Action if Needed

US Vice President JD Vance said the Trump administration is pursuing intensive negotiations with Iran but warned Washington is prepared to resume military operations if Tehran fails to agree to a deal preventing it from acquiring nuclear weapons. Vance told reporters during a White House briefing that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon, arguing an Iranian bomb could trigger a wider global nuclear arms race. He said the administration believes Tehran is interested in reaching an agreement and claimed recent diplomatic engagement has yielded progress, but noted it remains unclear until a deal is signed. Vance also dismissed reports suggesting Russia could take control of Iran's enriched uranium stockpile, stating that is not currently their plan.

Vance says US ready for Iran deal or war

Washington, May 20

US Vice President JD Vance said the Trump administration was pursuing intensive negotiations with Iran but warned Washington remained prepared to resume military operations if Tehran failed to agree to a deal preventing it from acquiring nuclear weapons.

"There are two options, two pathways we can go down when it comes to the Iran situation," Vance told reporters during a White House media briefing.

"What the president of the United States has said is, number one, Iran can never have a nuclear weapon," he said, arguing that an Iranian bomb could trigger a wider global nuclear arms race and destabilise the Middle East and beyond.

Vance said the administration believed Tehran was interested in reaching an agreement and claimed recent diplomatic engagement had yielded progress.

"We think the Iranians wanna make a deal," he said. "But we're not gonna know until we're actually putting pen to paper on signing a deal."

The Vice President described his recent diplomatic outreach as part of an effort to demonstrate Washington's willingness to negotiate "in good faith".

"Why did I spend, I think probably 22 hours on a plane going there, 24 hours coming back, and then 21 hours on the ground negotiating with the Iranians? It's because we wanted to show a sign of good faith," he said.

At the same time, Vance made clear that President Donald Trump was prepared to escalate military pressure if diplomacy failed.

"The option B is that we could restart the military campaign," he said. "We don't wanna go down that pathway, but the President is willing and able to go down that path if we have to."

Vance described Iran as "a very complicated country" with multiple centres of influence and said it was often difficult to identify Tehran's exact negotiating position.

"It's sometimes hard to figure out exactly what it is that the Iranians wanna accomplish outta the negotiation," he said.

He also dismissed reports suggesting Russia could take control of Iran's enriched uranium stockpile under a future arrangement.

"That is not currently our plan. That has never been our plan," Vance said.

During the briefing, Vance defended the administration's handling of the broader conflict and said the current ceasefire phase should not be viewed as an open-ended military engagement.

"The active period of conflict lasted about five, five and a half weeks," he said. "This is not a forever war. We're gonna take care of business and come home."

The Vice President also addressed domestic issues ranging from immigration and artificial intelligence to political violence and government fraud investigations.

He said a White House anti-fraud task force had uncovered "billions upon billions of dollars of fraud" in Medicare, Medicaid and immigration systems.

On artificial intelligence, Vance said the administration wanted the US to maintain leadership in the technology race while protecting privacy and national security.

"The President wants us to be pro innovation. He wants us to win the AI race against all other countries in the world," he said.

Vance also condemned recent incidents of political and religious violence, including a deadly shooting near a Muslim community centre in California and online comments mocking the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

"Political violence, wherever it comes from, is unacceptable in the United States of America," he said. "Let's talk with one another, not shoot each other when we disagree."

The Trump administration has intensified pressure on Iran in recent months amid renewed concerns over Tehran's nuclear programme and broader regional instability. Trump has repeatedly said Iran would not be allowed to acquire a nuclear weapon while also leaving open the possibility of a negotiated settlement.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

"This is not a forever war" — that's rich coming from the US, which has been bombing the Middle East for decades. Iran definitely shouldn't get nukes, but America needs to stop acting like the world's policeman. India should stay neutral and keep trading with Iran for oil.

Vikram M

I respect the diplomatic approach—Vance flying 22 hours for talks shows some seriousness. But let's be real, Trump's team is unpredictable. India should hedge our bets: keep buying Russian oil too, in case this Iran thing leads to sanctions or war. Chabahar project with Iran is vital for Afghanistan access; can't let US pressure kill it.

Rohit P

Only Indians will understand—America says "no nukes for Iran" but gave them to Israel 🤔. The nuclear double standard is so obvious. Anyway, I hope this doesn't lead to another war in our neighbourhood. Oil prices would go crazy, and we're already struggling with inflation.

Kavya N

Vance talking about "good faith" negotiation while threatening war in the same breath—classic American diplomacy. India should quietly encourage both sides to talk more; we need stable energy prices and our diaspora in the Gulf safe. Also, that bit about AI leadership shows US is trying to dominate everything—tech race is real!

James A

As an American, I'm tired of these endless threats. Trump and Vance seem to think "tough guy" diplomacy works. Look at North Korea—decades of threats, no real progress. Iran's a proud civilization, not a pushover. If the US keeps this up, they

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