Trump and Macron will meet over dinner at Versailles palace after G7 summit in France

AI Summary
U.S. President Trump announced he would sign a nuclear agreement with Iran on Sunday and promised immediate reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, but Iran's Foreign Ministry stated it had no plans to send negotiators to discussions in the coming days. Trump is scheduled to meet Middle Eastern leaders at the G7 summit in France, though Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu will not attend bilateral sessions.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets emphasized Trump's pattern of announcing imminent diplomatic breakthroughs that fail to materialize, highlighting the stark contradiction between his announcement and Iran's explicit denial as reason for skepticism.
Moderate: Centrist outlets reported Trump's statements and Iran's contradictory response as competing factual claims without strong editorial judgment, noting logistical details of the G7 meetings and involvement of various regional leaders.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets framed Trump's announcement as a positive diplomatic achievement on nuclear non-proliferation, emphasizing his commitment to preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons despite Iran's denial of the immediate timeline.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- US President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron will meet over dinner at the glittering Palace of Versailles near Paris after the G7 summit of leading industrialized nations next week in France, their governments announced Saturday.
Trump, who is trying to make progress on finalizing an Iran war deal in the coming days, is expected to have a busy schedule of one-on-one meetings with foreign leaders on the sidelines of the summit in the French lakeside town of Ev ...
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