Trump Says He Is 'Not Satisfied' With Iran's Latest Ceasefire Proposal as Nuclear Dispute Stalls Talks
Zero Signal Staff
Published May 1, 2026 at 1:46 PM ET · 9 hours ago

AP News, Reuters, CBS News, CNN
President Donald Trump said on May 1 that he was 'not satisfied' with Iran's latest proposal in ongoing negotiations aimed at ending the war between the two countries, according to AP News.
President Donald Trump said on May 1 that he was 'not satisfied' with Iran's latest proposal in ongoing negotiations aimed at ending the war between the two countries, according to AP News. The rejection came after Iran submitted a new proposal for a second round of peace talks through Pakistani mediators, CBS News reported, deepening a standoff over the sequencing of nuclear discussions and the status of a U.S. naval blockade.
The Details
The two sides have been operating under a ceasefire for roughly three weeks as of May 1, AP News reported, but the diplomatic track has run into a fundamental disagreement over what must happen before broader negotiations can resume.
Iran's latest offer envisioned a staged process that would postpone nuclear-program discussions until after the war ended and shipping disputes were resolved, according to Reuters. Under that framework, Iran wanted an end to the war, guarantees the United States would not restart it, and relief from the U.S. naval blockade before the two sides would move to wider talks, Reuters reported.
Trump's team has taken the opposite position. Reuters reported that U.S. negotiators wanted nuclear issues addressed from the outset rather than deferred until after the war and shipping disputes were settled. That gap in sequencing is the central obstacle the two proposals have not bridged.
On Truth Social, Trump characterized Iran's position in sharper terms. 'Iran has just informed us that they are in a "State of Collapse". They want us to "Open the Hormuz Strait," as soon as possible, as they try to figure out their leadership situation,' Trump wrote, according to Reuters.
Iranian sources told CNN that talks could restart if the United States lifted its blockade of Iranian ports and Iran fully reopened the Strait of Hormuz. CNN noted it was unclear whether Iran's latest formal proposal to Pakistani mediators went that far, making the precise terms of what Tehran put on the table uncertain.
The White House confirmed negotiations are continuing. 'President Trump has been clear that Iran can never possess a nuclear weapon, and negotiations continue to ensure the short- and long-term national security of the United States,' White House spokesperson Anna Kelly said in a statement to CNN.
Context
Pakistan's role as a mediator channel for the latest proposal was confirmed by CBS News, AP News, and CNN. The use of a third-party intermediary reflects the absence of direct diplomatic channels between Washington and Tehran.
The sequencing dispute at the heart of the breakdown — whether nuclear talks precede or follow a formal end to the war and the resolution of shipping disputes — has been a consistent fault line in the negotiations, Reuters reported. Iran's proposal would leave nuclear discussions for a later phase; the Trump administration has insisted those talks must happen first.
The ceasefire, now roughly three weeks old as of May 1 per AP News reporting, has held even as both sides continued to dispute the terms of any formal settlement. The durability of the pause has not translated into movement on the substantive disagreements driving the current impasse.
The exact contents of Iran's newest proposal have not been publicly released. AP News and CBS News confirmed the proposal was submitted and that Trump rejected it in broad terms. Reuters and CNN described the proposal's framework through sourced reporting, but the full text remains undisclosed, leaving both sides' characterizations as the primary public record.
What's Next
Trump's rejection of Iran's latest proposal leaves the two sides without an agreed framework for a second round of talks, based on AP News and Reuters reporting as of May 1. No new timeline for resumed negotiations was reported by any of the four outlets.
The White House statement from Anna Kelly, as reported by CNN, indicated negotiations are continuing, but no specifics on the format, location, or schedule for future talks were included in the available reporting. The unresolved disputes over the blockade, the Strait of Hormuz, and the sequencing of nuclear discussions remain the outstanding issues, according to Reuters and CNN.
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