WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said on May 19, 2026, that he has given Iran roughly 72 hours to accept a broad peace agreement or face a large-scale U.S. military assault. He told reporters at an unscheduled White House press conference that the United States had been less than one hour away from launching a massive bombing campaign against Iranian targets earlier that morning, before he agreed to a temporary pause. Trump said leaders of Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates personally appealed for a brief extension to pursue diplomacy, arguing that Iranian negotiators were showing some willingness to discuss terms. He described the delay as tightly limited, saying the U.S. military could move ahead with what he called "another big hit" as soon as Friday, Saturday, Sunday or early next week if talks fail. The administration’s stated objectives include preventing Iran from developing a new nuclear weapon and forcing major rollbacks of its military capabilities. U.S. demands include the removal of all enriched uranium from Iranian territory, strict caps on remaining nuclear facilities, dismantlement of Iran’s ballistic missile infrastructure, an end to its naval operations in regional waterways, and a halt to cooperation with regional proxy networks. Iranian officials have responded that any U.S. strike would trigger an immediate military reaction, and they have floated their own framework requiring a ceasefire on all fronts, withdrawal of U.S. forces from areas near Iran, lifting of sanctions, release of frozen assets, an end to the maritime blockade, and reparations for damage from previous U.S. and Israeli attacks, terms Trump has already rejected.
Prepared by Rachel Morgan and reviewed by editorial team.
Esta situación podría afectar su seguridad. Si el conflicto se intensifica, podría afectar a las tropas estadounidenses o incluso a la seguridad nacional. Manténgase informado de las actualizaciones oficiales. Considere discutir planes de emergencia con su familia, por si acaso.
El ultimátum del presidente Trump a Irán es una apuesta arriesgada. Si las conversaciones fracasan, podríamos ver un asalto militar a gran escala. Si tienen éxito, podría conducir a un Medio Oriente más seguro. Vale la pena reenviar si conoce a alguien en el ejército o con familiares en la región.
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