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vendredi 17 avril 2026

MAJOR BREAKING? Trump Says Iran Agreed to a "100% FULL HALT" — What He Actually Announced


MAJOR BREAKING? Trump Says Iran Agreed to a "100% FULL HALT" — What He Actually Announced



President Trump has once again delivered on his promise of peace through strength, securing a complete and indefinite halt to Iran’s nuclear weapons program. No more empty talks or weak concessions—this deal stops their dangerous ambitions cold without releasing a single dollar of frozen funds. America’s resolve under his leadership is restoring stability in the Middle East and keeping our nation safe from rogue threats.

The Strait of Hormuz remains open, ensuring critical energy flows continue uninterrupted for the world economy. This victory proves that real leadership means negotiating from power, not desperation, and puts adversaries on notice that America will no longer tolerate nuclear blackmail.

Conservatives have always known strong borders, a powerful military, and unapologetic diplomacy work. With Trump back in the White House, our enemies are backing down and our allies are breathing easier. This is what winning looks like for the free world. 
The "Republican Army" post you're sharing shows President Trump in front of troops at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, with the headline: "Iran Agreed to a 100% FULL HALT to Their Nuclear Program — President Trump Actually Did It PEACE Through STRENGTH."
The image is real — Trump spoke at Al Udeid in March 2026 — but the claim is an exaggeration of what Trump himself announced this week.
Here's what we know as of April 17, 2026.
What Trump saidSpeaking from the White House lawn, Trump said: "Iran has agreed to not have a nuclear weapon, they have agreed to it very powerfully."
He added: "They have agreed to give us back the nuclear dust. We have a lot of agreement with Iran, and I think something is going to happen very positive."
According to multiple outlets, Trump says Iran has agreed to not have a nuclear weapon & nearly all other demands as deal with terror regime is 'close'. IRAN has agreed to abandon its pursuit of a nuclear weapon for the next 20 years, Donald Trump says.
Reuters confirmed the framing: U.S. President Donald Trump announced Iran's pledge to abandon nuclear weapons within 20 years, calling it a 'very powerful statement' during a White House press briefing.
What Iran has actually agreed to — so farNothing is signed. Trump himself said the two sides are now "very close" to a deal and that he may attend personally if the deal is signed in Islamabad.
Iran's position, reported by Reuters and Al Jazeera, is different:
Iran demands Trump commit to not abandoning a new nuclear pact during talks, as both nations seek to resolve decades-old tensions. Iran insists on maintaining its enrichment capabilities and missile program.Iran has publicly offered a 5-year moratorium on enrichment to 60%, while the Trump administration proposes a 20-year uranium enrichment moratorium.Iranian officials have not confirmed a "100% full halt" to the entire program — they continue to insist on a civilian enrichment right under the NPT.In short: Trump says Iran agreed to no weapons for 20 years. Iran says it will discuss limits if sanctions are lifted and the U.S. guarantees it won't walk away like in 2018.
Why the "peace through strength" framingThe announcement comes after 38 days of U.S.-Israel strikes on Iranian nuclear sites at Natanz, Fordow, and Isfahan, plus a U.S. naval blockade of Iranian oil exports. Trump signed a presidential memo on Feb 4, 2025, reimposing policies to block Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon and limiting its oil exports.
Trump is linking three wins in one week:
The Strait of Hormuz reopened for commercial trafficIran reportedly agreed to hand over highly enriched uranium "dust"A 10-day Israel-Lebanon ceasefireHe told reporters: "We have a very good relationship with Iran right now," and warned that if Tehran does not agree to a deal, the fighting will resume.
Has Iran ever agreed to a full halt before?Yes — and then restarted.
2015 JCPOA: Iran agreed to limit enrichment to 3.67% for 15 years. Trump withdrew in 2018.2023 informal talks: Iran slowed 60% enrichment briefly, then accelerated after the Gaza war.That history is why Iran now wants guarantees Trump will not quit a new nuclear pact — a guarantee no U.S. president can legally bind future administrations to without Senate ratification.
Bottom lineDid Iran agree to a 100% FULL HALT? Not according to any signed document. Trump says they verbally agreed to no nuclear weapons for 20 years and to return enriched material.Is a deal close? Trump says yes, talks may resume this weekend in Islamabad, mediated by Pakistan. Iranian state media has not confirmed the terms.Is this "peace through strength"? The administration is selling it that way — using B-2 strikes and a blockade to force talks. Critics note the same approach in Trump's first term led to Iran expanding enrichment from 0 to 60%.The post's photo at Al Udeid is from March, not from a signing ceremony. Until a text is released, verified by the IAEA, and signed by both sides, the "100% full halt" remains a Trump claim — not a treaty.
Watch Islamabad this weekend. If Trump shows up and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi signs, then the headline will be accurate. Until then, it's a negotiation, not a done deal.

 

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