'I'm blaming JD': Key lines from Trump's Iran deal press conference – Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Home Latest News 'I'm blaming JD': Key lines from Trump's Iran deal press conference – Australian Broadcasting Corporation
'I'm blaming JD': Key lines from Trump's Iran deal press conference – Australian Broadcasting Corporation

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By Emily Clark
Topic:Unrest, Conflict and War
Thu 18 Jun 2026 at 12:11pm
Donald Trump issued new threats against Iran as he addressed the press at the G7.  (Reuters: Evelyn Hockstein)
Donald Trump has held a press conference as the United States and Tehran have signed a memorandum of understanding to end the war in Iran. 
Moments after the media briefing, held at the G7 summit in the French Alps, the official text of the agreement was released.
The 14-point agreement had already been widely circulated and indicated sanctions relief for Iran and the opening of the Strait of Hormuz was part of the deal.
Iran war live updates: For the latest news on the Middle East crisis, read our blog.
During the press conference, Mr Trump threatened to resume attacks if Iran failed to honour its commitments.
He was asked about the role of US Vice-President JD Vance, how he would sell this deal as a win to the American people and why his position on Iran's ballistic missile program had changed.
Here are the key takeaways from his comments.
After a wideranging press meeting, where he was flanked by advisers including Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Howard Lutnick, Mr Trump was asked why, at that point, he was not "sticking around" for the official signing ceremony, where Mr Vance was expected to appear.
"I might … but it might not be the kind of document I should be signing," he said.
It was at the very end of questioning, and Mr Trump was asked if this was a way to ensure the political stakes remained higher for the vice-president.
"He's going to turn his plane around and get the hell out of here."
Mr Vance has attended peace talks with Iranian representatives in Islamabad. And at one point, he was left waiting to depart Washington DC when there was no confirmation Tehran's team would show up in Pakistan.
As details of the 14-point deal emerged over the weekend, it was Mr Vance who was on the interview circuit in the US, and seemingly intended to be the White House face of the deal.
In the hours since, video has been released of Mr Trump signing the memorandum of understanding (MOU) at Versailles.
Topic:Unrest, Conflict and War
Topic:Unrest, Conflict and War
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Topic:World Politics
Topic:War
Mr Trump used the press conference to issue stark warnings about what might happen if Tehran did not hold up its end.
He reiterated this MOU was not final and he could resume bombing if he felt dissatisfied with Iran's adoption of it.
"If they don't honour that, we'll probably go back to bombing them until they honour it," he said.
"We're going to bomb the hell out of them if they violate the agreement. I don't want them to. I want them to honour the agreement.
"In war, terrible things happen."
Mr Trump was also asked at the G7 summit if the MOU wording was final.
"No, it's not final. It's a memorandum of understanding. And if I don't like it, we'll go back to shooting at them, dropping bombs on their head," he said.
In the comments made overnight, Mr Trump said that his deal with Iran was better than the one former US president Barack Obama signed with Tehran in 2015.
The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which is commonly referred to as the Iran Nuclear Deal, was a landmark agreement designed to ensure "Iran's nuclear programme will be exclusively peaceful".
Mr Trump has long been critical of the Iran Nuclear Deal. Overnight, he again called it "one of the worst deals".
The US president is of the belief the JCPOA "would have put [Iran] on the road to a nuclear weapon" but experts do not agree.
Iran agreeing to a ceasefire deal with the United States tells us Tehran likely had something to gain from signing on.
"Donald Trump believed he could achieve a better deal than the JCPOA, which he tore up in 2018, but what he has achieved now is nowhere near what JCPOA had put in place," Shahram Akbarzadeh, a professor of Middle East politics at Deakin University, told the ABC.
"JCPOA had put in place a detailed mechanism of control and monitoring over Iran's nuclear program, making sure that uranium enrichment was within the 3.6 per cent limit.
"So what we have at the moment is not even talking about Iran's nuclear program or talking about Iran's missile program or its support for proxies. All we are talking about and all we have achieved right now is simply a cessation of hostilities for the opening of the Strait of Hormuz, and that is nowhere near what JCPOA had achieved."
Mr Obama told ABC America over the weekend that he doubted that the new deal would be "significantly different" from the one his administration negotiated.
The MOU does say that over the next 60 days of negotiations, the future of Iran's nuclear program will be one of the main points of discussion as the parties work towards a final peace agreement.
Iran has long denied claims it is working towards a nuclear weapon and, in the MOU, it again confirms its commitment to the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty.
At the outset of the war, Mr Trump suggested one of the goals of Operation Epic Fury was regime change in Iran.
Former supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in the opening strikes, but the Islamic Republic remains.
Overnight, Mr Trump said he believed the people now running Iran, were "very smart".
"I think they're very smart. I think they are far less radicalised."
Analysts have told the ABC the group wielding power inside Iran right now is made up of current and former leaders of the military and security apparatus.
At the outbreak of the war, Mr Trump had also said a goal was to destroy Iran's ballistic missile capability, but overnight, his comments seemed to suggest that had changed.
Iran's missile program is not mentioned in the MOU.
The presidents of the United States and Iran have officially signed a memorandum of understanding aimed at ending the war and reopening the Strait of Hormuz.
Mr Trump was asked why it was now acceptable to him that Iran keep some of that capability.
"What are they keeping? They have less than other nations now," he said.
On the tarmac in Paris, after the G7 summit, Mr Trump was again asked about Iran's missile program and in those comments he said it would be "unfair" for Tehran to not have access to the weapons if other countries had them.
"I'm saying that ⁠if other countries have them, it's a little bit unfair for them not to have some," Mr Trump told reporters.
"If Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and they all have some, I would ‌say ⁠in relative proportion, I think it's OK."
This is considered to be a departure from what the United States has previously said about Iran's ballistic missile program, including comments earlier in the war.
A reporter asked the US president: "A wise man once said in January 2020, Iran never won a war but never lost a negotiation."
Mr Trump asked: "Who said that?"
The reporter replied: "Donald Trump … so how do you go back to the United States and convince a sceptical American public this deal is a win?"
In his long-winded response, Mr Trump took aim at the press, but also revealed the US could run out of oil reserves in four weeks.
Donald Trump says: "In war, terrible things happen." (Reuters: Evelyn Hockstein)
"If I went out and continued to bomb them … I'd get bad press. There's nothing I can do," he said.
"But what this does is it allows the ships to go. If we keep bombing, those ships won't be going."
Mr Trump then discussed the value of the oil held up in the Strait of Hormuz and said: "Also, we run out of reserves in four weeks."
The MOU is only meant to be a temporary document, and over the next few months, negotiations on some of the biggest stumbling blocks between the US and Iran will continue.
Iran's foreign ministry has confirmed the 60-day negotiation period begins today.
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