
The United States and Iran have reportedly reached an agreement to end the war, but the actual text of the deal has not been made public. The secrecy surrounding the agreement has created fresh questions in Washington and beyond.
Israel has not been allowed to review the document, while members of Congress are now asking to see the terms for themselves. Key concerns remain unresolved, including what will happen to billions of dollars in frozen Iranian funds and how the deal may affect the ongoing fighting in Lebanon.
President Donald Trump is concluding the G7 summit in France today, presenting the Iran issue as largely settled. He said Iran is now in the “rearview mirror,” suggesting that his administration is ready to shift attention toward other global conflicts.
At the same time, Trump criticized Israel over the situation in Lebanon, signaling tension over how regional security issues are being handled after the Iran agreement.
With the Iran conflict no longer at the center of Trump’s immediate foreign policy agenda, the president is now turning more attention toward ending the war in Ukraine.
His comments suggest that Washington may be preparing for a broader diplomatic push aimed at reducing international conflicts, even as several major questions remain about the Iran deal and its regional consequences.
In domestic politics, Georgia’s primary runoffs delivered a mixed outcome for Trump. His endorsement helped Mike Collins win the Republican Senate nomination, setting up a major race against Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff.
However, Trump did not win across the board. His preferred candidate in Georgia’s governor race was defeated by a self-funded billionaire, making the night a split result for the president’s influence in the state.
Trump is closing the G7 summit by framing the Iran conflict as settled while shifting focus to Ukraine. However, the secrecy around the U.S.-Iran agreement, Israel’s exclusion from reviewing the text, congressional demands for transparency, frozen Iranian funds, and the fighting in Lebanon all remain major issues. Meanwhile, Georgia’s runoff results show both the strength and limits of Trump’s political endorsement power.