Face-to-face signing of US-Iran deal 'up in the air' after Trump's Versailles signing

AI Summary
The United States and Iran reached an interim agreement to halt military conflict, featuring provisions for immediate combat cessation, Iranian nuclear commitments, sanctions relief, and a 60-day period for negotiating final terms. The Friday signing remains uncertain amid implementation concerns and unresolved obstacles to a comprehensive agreement.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets express deep skepticism about the agreement's practical viability, contending it lacks sufficient detail and mechanisms to genuinely end the conflict, and highlight Trump's threatening rhetoric and the possibility the signing could still collapse.
Moderate: Centrist outlets report factually on the agreement's contents and immediate provisions—uranium reduction, sanctions relief, shipping restoration—while emphasizing the complexity of remaining challenges and noting that the 60-day timeline for negotiations is not a firm deadline.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets emphasize the importance of transparency and public disclosure of the agreement's specific terms.
The US-Iran deal was initially meant to be signed in Switzerland, before US President Donald Trump decided to sign it in the palace of Versailles at a state dinner with French President of Emmanuel Macron.
But Switzerland has confirmed that talks on the implementation of the deal are still to happen on June 19 in Geneva.
FRANCE 24's Philip Turle tells us more. ...
이 뉴스, 독자들은 어떻게 느꼈나요?
첫 반응을 남겨보세요로그인하면 감정 반응에 참여할 수 있어요.