Ultimatums, diplomacy and a trip to Graceland as Trump eyes a deal with Iran
3 hours ago Anthony ZurcherNorth America correspondent America may be a nation at war, but President Donald Trump's activities over the past few days have been a mix of diplomacy and diversions - with the occasional swing towards the surreal.
On Friday, he said the US war against Iran was "winding down".
By Saturday night, he had given Iran a 48-hour deadline to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face withering new American airstrikes. The next day, he golfed and spent the afternoon at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida. By Monday morning, with global markets swooning, he said the Iranians were engaging in "constructive" talks with the US. Then he flew to Memphis, Tennessee, gave a speech and visited Graceland, music legend Elvis Presley's historic home.
Meanwhile, US and Israeli airstrikes on Iranian targets are ongoing.
The Iranians continue to fire missiles and launch drones against US forces and its Middle East allies. Traffic through Hormuz remains limited.
It was a stark warning.
Iran replied that it would, in turn, target regional energy and water infrastructure.
A new escalation of the three-week war, with potentially dire consequences for civilians, appeared imminent. By Monday morning, however, Trump had called off the strikes – at least temporarily.
He struck an optimistic tone over the course of the day, as he flew to Tennessee for a visit he said had been planned weeks earlier. The US and Iran have "major points of agreement," he said from the tarmac before his departure. "They want very much to make a deal," he said. "We'd like to make a deal, too. "
"Iran has one more opportunity to end its threats to America and our allies," he said. "We hope they take it. " Then Trump headed to Graceland, Memphis's most famous tourist attraction, to tout a drop in the city's crime rate, which he attributed to his deployment of National Guard soldiers to its streets. As Trump walked through Elvis's home, observing the fashion and design tastes of the "king of rock'n'roll", reports continued to filter in of a presidential phone call to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and potential direct talks with Iranian officials later in the week.
Iranian officials denied any substantive talks between the two nations.
What had been shaping up as a day of heartbreak for major world economies now had a glimmer of hope for investors eager to see an off-ramp to this conflict.
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