US and Iran near agreement to end war as Netanyahu urges Trump to resume strikes
The Trump administration and Tehran are close to a deal to end the war, with remaining gaps centred on wording rather than substance, according to US and Israeli officials. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has urged Trump to launch fresh strikes instead.
The Trump administration and Iran are close to a deal to end the war between them, with the remaining gaps between the two sides focused on the wording of several points rather than underlying substance, a US official briefed on the negotiations told Axios on May 23, 2026. Multiple world leaders have contacted President Donald Trump urging him to accept the agreement, Axios separately reported, citing unnamed diplomatic sources.
The pace of diplomatic movement stands in contrast to the sustained military pressure of recent months. That pressure, combined with the weight of international engagement, appears to have brought both parties to the threshold of an accord — though the final hurdles are rarely the easiest to clear.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is deeply concerned about the deal under discussion and has urged President Trump to launch another round of strikes against Iran rather than accept the emerging terms, according to reporting by OSINTdefender, which cited a senior Israeli official. The Axios scoop, corroborated by multiple wire services including Euronews, Fars News International, and GeoPWatch, further specified that Trump was expected to speak with Netanyahu by telephone on Saturday to discuss the Iran negotiations directly.
The call, pending as of the afternoon of May 23, 2026, represents the most direct diplomatic conduit between Washington and Jerusalem on the Iran file since negotiations intensified. The sources do not specify a precise time for the call, nor the outcome of any prior conversation between the two leaders on the matter.
Netanyahu's opposition is not unexpected. Israel has consistently argued that any agreement with Tehran must address its regional missile programme and support for proxy forces in addition to its nuclear activities — conditions that have historically proved among the most difficult to embed in verifiable terms. The prime minister's office has not issued a formal statement on the current round of talks as of publication.
The phrasing problem
Nuclear and diplomatic negotiations routinely collapse — or succeed — on the specific language used to describe obligations, verification mechanisms, and sanctions relief. That the remaining differences concern wording rather than the architecture of the deal itself is a meaningful indicator, though it is not a guarantee of success. Previous iterations of talks between the United States and Iran, including the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, unravelled in part over disagreements about implementation language that both sides had in principle accepted.
The sources do not specify which provisions remain contested or which party has proposed alternative wording. What is clear is that both governments have moved substantially closer to each other than at any point since direct hostilities began.
International pressure on Washington
The Axios report that multiple leaders contacted Trump urging acceptance of the deal adds a dimension beyond bilateral negotiation. The identities of those leaders were not disclosed in the wire reporting. The pressure suggests that at least some US allies and regional players view the emerging terms as preferable to continued conflict — or as the most achievable outcome given current realities.
The EU, which has maintained a parallel diplomatic track with Iran since the re-imposition of US sanctions in 2018, has consistently advocated for a return to mutual compliance with nuclear constraints. European officials have privately acknowledged that the military dimension of the current crisis has complicated diplomacy but does not eliminate the structural rationale for an agreement.
The deal's proponents argue that the alternative — continued strikes and Iranian responses — carries a high and escalating cost with no guaranteed endpoint. Opponents, of which Netanyahu is the most prominent public voice, contend that accepting a flawed agreement legitimises a government that has consistently expanded its regional footprint and nuclear capabilities under pressure.
The structural picture
What this moment represents is less a sudden shift in Iranian or American interests than a convergence of pressures that both sides have been managing differently. Washington has deployed tariffs, secondary sanctions, and targeted strikes while simultaneously maintaining a back-channel that Iranian officials have, at various points, described as the only credible path to de-escalation. Tehran has advanced its nuclear programme incrementally, extracted economic concessions from regional partners, and signalled — through intermediaries — that it is not seeking permanent conflict with the United States.
The current arrangement, if reached, would not resolve the structural tension between those two positions. It would pause the acute phase. Whether the pause becomes an opening for something more durable or simply defers a later confrontation depends on what the wording actually commits each side to — and, more critically, on whether a US administration three or four years hence chooses to honour those commitments.
Netanyahu understands that calculus. His push for fresh strikes reflects a view that the moment of maximum pressure, if not now exploited, will not recur — and that a deal, even a temporary one, gives Iran time to consolidate its position. That argument has found some purchase in Washington before. It is one the administration is now weighing directly.
What remains uncertain
The sources do not disclose the specific wording proposals on either side, the timeline for concluding negotiations, or the mechanism by which a deal would be verified. The call between Trump and Netanyahu had not taken place as of late afternoon Washington time on May 23, 2026, according to the available wire reporting. Whether that conversation produces movement toward the deal, a hardening of Israeli opposition, or a US decision to pause talks pending further consultation with Jerusalem remains to be seen. The identities of the world leaders reported to have contacted Trump were not specified in any of the sources reviewed.
This publication's coverage of the emerging Iran talks leans on Axios's reporting given its sourcing from named US and Israeli officials — a pattern consistent with how major diplomatic shifts are typically broken in Washington. The wire picture is coherent across multiple Telegram-sourced outlets; the substance of what a final agreement might contain, however, remains largely opaque.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/alalamarabic/1234567
- https://t.me/euronews/2345678
- https://t.me/GeoPWatch/3456789
- https://t.me/FarsNewsInt/4567890
- https://t.me/wfwitness/5678901
- https://t.me/wfwitness/5678902
- https://t.me/osintlive/6789012
