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HeadlinePolitics

Trump says Iran ‘taken too long to negotiate,’ will have to ‘pay the price’

Last updated: June 10, 2026 5:49 pm
Ayesha Masood
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Trump says Iran ‘taken too long to negotiate,’ will have to ‘pay the price’
Trump says Iran ‘taken too long to negotiate,’ will have to ‘pay the price’
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Donald Trump is ratcheting up the pressure on Tehran, declaring that Iran has waited too long to return to the negotiating table and will now face consequences. The President-elect’s comments, delivered via social media, signal a sharp hardening of his administration’s stance before he even steps into the Oval Office.

The message is clear: the window for a deal is closing, and the economic and diplomatic costs for Iran are set to rise.

Trump’s ultimatum arrives as his transition team finalizes a “maximum pressure” strategy reminiscent of his first term. This approach aims to cripple Iran’s oil exports and squeeze its financial networks, effectively cutting off the revenue streams the regime relies on to fund its regional proxies. By framing the delay as a strategic failure by Tehran, Trump is positioning himself to justify an immediate and aggressive rollout of new sanctions.

The Iranian leadership remains defiant. Tehran has long maintained that it will not negotiate under the threat of economic strangulation, arguing that Washington’s previous withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal destroyed the credibility of any future agreements. Officials in Tehran have dismissed Trump’s rhetoric as “bluster,” yet the underlying reality is that the Iranian economy is already buckling under the weight of existing sanctions and a plummeting currency.

Trump’s team is betting that the current economic strain, combined with a fresh wave of sanctions, will force the regime’s hand. The strategy relies on the assumption that the Iranian government prioritizes survival over regional influence—an assumption that has historically proven volatile.

The ripple effects are already being felt in global energy markets. Traders are bracing for supply disruptions, pushing oil futures higher as the market anticipates a complete freeze in diplomatic channels.

For the incoming administration, this isn’t just about a nuclear deal. It’s about dismantling Iran’s regional leverage, from the Levant to the Persian Gulf. Trump’s directive to his team is simple: stop the talk and start the squeeze.

Whether this brinkmanship leads to a breakthrough or a wider regional flare-up remains the central question of his early foreign policy. For now, the countdown to the new administration’s first executive actions has begun, and Tehran is officially on notice.
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