‘I will do what I have to do’ if Iran does not stick to deal, says Trump

AI Summary
US and Iranian delegations concluded the first round of negotiations in Burgenstock, Switzerland on June 21-22, mediated by Pakistan and Qatar, producing a joint agreement on a roadmap to conclude a comprehensive peace settlement within 60 days. The talks, conducted under an existing Memorandum of Understanding framework, aimed at ending regional military operations including those in Lebanon, though the negotiations were marked by escalating tensions including Trump's repeated threats and Iran's closure of a strategic waterway.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets emphasize the constructive and encouraging nature of the agreement, highlighting the breakthrough and progress achieved despite the tense opening, framing the roadmap as a meaningful step toward resolving the conflict.
Moderate: Centrist outlets present the talks neutrally, focusing on the procedural outcome—the agreed roadmap and 60-day timeline—while acknowledging both the substantive diplomatic achievement and the contextual tensions surrounding negotiations.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets emphasize the difficulties and escalating tensions overshadowing the talks, highlighting Trump's threats and Iran's provocative actions as complications that complicate the path to implementation.
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US President Donald Trump said on Monday “I will do what I have to do” if Iran does not stick to its agreement with Washington.
“If Iran doesn’t live up to their agreement, or if they’re not behaving, I will do what I have to do,” Trump told reporters.
Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian signed an interim US-Iran deal last week, more than three months after the US and Israel attacked Iran and Iran responded with its own attacks on Israel and Gulf states with US bases.
Trump said on...