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

AI Summary
President Trump announced a nuclear agreement with Iran that includes $300 billion in economic relief and permits Iran to retain its conventional ballistic missile arsenal, contradicting his 2015 criticism of the Obama-era nuclear accord. Trump defended this allowance by arguing it would be inequitable to deny Iran weapons that other nations possess. The deal has drawn criticism from Democrats and policy experts, who argue it strengthens Iran's regional position without achieving meaningful constraints on its weapons capabilities.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets highlight the contradiction between Trump's harsh 2015 denunciation of the Obama-era agreement and his current deal, which similarly provides substantial economic benefits to Tehran. They frame the arrangement as empowering Iran without securing meaningful security concessions.
Moderate: Centrist outlets describe the agreement as controversial and a departure from decades of established U.S. policy, presenting security concerns from experts and lawmakers about allowing Iranian ballistic missiles. They report Trump's defense that denying Iran missiles would be unfair given other nations' arsenals.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets frame the agreement as a pragmatic diplomatic achievement, emphasizing Trump's argument that ballistic missile possession constitutes equitable treatment across nations. They characterize the deal as fulfilling U.S. objectives to conclude regional conflict and restore strategic maritime access.
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. ...
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