Iran Proposes 30-Day End to War in New Truce Offer; Trump Says Tehran Must Pay a Price

by Chang SeongWon Posted : May 3, 2026, 18:09Updated : May 3, 2026, 18:09
President Donald Trump answers reporters' questions at Palm Beach airport in Florida on May 2, local time. [AP Photo/Yonhap]
President Donald Trump answers reporters' questions at Palm Beach airport in Florida on May 2, local time. [AP Photo/Yonhap]

As the United States and Iran continue behind-the-scenes contacts over a cease-fire, Iran has proposed a new truce plan to Washington that includes ending the war within 30 days, according to reports. President Donald Trump signaled dissatisfaction and suggested the U.S. could return to military action.

AP and CNN reported on May 2, citing Iran’s semiofficial Tasnim News Agency and Iranian state TV, that Iran sent the United States a new cease-fire proposal through mediator Pakistan. The plan has 14 clauses.

The proposal was described as Iran’s response to a nine-point U.S. cease-fire plan. Its central element is ending the war within 30 days, rather than a two-month cease-fire proposed by the United States, the reports said. The Iranian plan also includes security guarantees related to U.S. hostile acts, a U.S. troop withdrawal from areas around Iran, an end to a U.S. maritime blockade of Iran, the unfreezing of Iranian accounts and lifting of sanctions, an end to the Lebanon conflict, and a new mechanism for managing the Strait of Hormuz, according to the reports.

Axios, citing two sources, reported that Iran’s proposal calls for a one-month negotiating period to discuss reopening the Strait of Hormuz, ending the U.S. maritime blockade and ending the Lebanon war, with nuclear talks to follow only after agreement is reached on those items.

Kazem Gharibabadi, Iran’s deputy foreign minister, said the goal of the proposal is a “permanent halt” to the war. “The ball is now in the U.S. court to choose a diplomatic solution or continue confrontation,” he said.
Trump: Iran must pay a price

Trump responded skeptically. In a post on his social media platform Truth Social, he said the United States would soon review Iran’s proposal, but added that it was hard to imagine accepting it because Iran “has not yet paid enough of a price” for what it has done “to humanity and the world” over the past 47 years, a reference to Iran’s posture since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Before boarding Air Force One at Palm Beach airport in Florida, Trump was asked whether he could resume attacks on Iran. “If they (Iran) act rude or do bad things,” he said, adding, “For now, we’ll watch. That could definitely happen.” He was reported to have received a new military plan on Iran from U.S. Central Command on April 30.

Iran also warned of renewed fighting. Mohammad Jafar Asadi, deputy commander of the IRGC’s Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, told the semiofficial Fars News Agency that a U.S.-Iran clash could resume and said it was being proven that the United States does not keep “any promises or agreements.”

The White House has said lobbyist Nick Stewart, who served as a State Department official during Trump’s first term, has joined the Iran negotiating team. CBS, citing officials, reported Stewart was recommended by Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and a member of the Iran negotiating team, and is known as a hard-liner who strongly supports military action against Iran. Separately, the State Department said on May 1 it fast-tracked approval of $8.6 billion (about 12.6533 trillion won) in arms sales to key regional partners including Israel, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

The developments have kept tensions high, with both sides continuing to discuss a cease-fire while not ruling out a return to military confrontation.

The United States has paused military operations since agreeing on April 8 to a two-week truce with Iran. In a letter to Congress on May 1 marking 60 days since notifying lawmakers about the Iran war, Trump said hostilities with Iran had “ended,” signaling that additional congressional approval would not be needed if the war was no longer continuing beyond the 60-day period.




* This article has been translated by AI.