Trump Calls Reports of US Payments to Iran 'Fake News'
Quick Look
- Donald Trump denied reports of US payments to Iran, calling them 'fake news' and accusing Democrats of spreading the information.
- He stated Iran has agreed to never have a nuclear weapon.
- Earlier reports indicated an agreement to end Middle East hostilities, with a ceasefire and lifting of the US naval blockade.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
US President Donald Trump denied reports of planned US payments to Iran, calling them 'fake news.' Earlier reports indicated an agreement to end Middle East hostilities was reached.
WASHINGTON, June 16. /TASS/. US President Donald Trump has called reports of planned US payments to Iran "fake news."
"Iran has agreed to never have a nuclear weapon!" the US leader wrote on his Truth Social page. According to Trump, "the story that the US is paying Iran 300 million dollars is fake news." He accused Democrats of spreading this information.
The US president mentioned a $300 million payment, though several media outlets had previously reported that Iran could access a $300 billion fund for reconstruction.
Earlier, officials from the US, Iran, and Pakistan, the mediator of the talks, confirmed that Washington and Tehran had reached an agreement aimed at ending hostilities in the Middle East. The document is scheduled to be signed in Geneva on June 19. According to Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi, during the 60-day ceasefire, the parties will discuss Tehran’s nuclear program, among other things. The US naval blockade of Iran will be lifted as of June 15, and there will be an immediate and permanent cessation of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon. The US and Israel launched a war against Iran on February 28.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
US-Iran agreement signing on June 19
Likely · Within days
Open Questions
- Will the ceasefire hold?
- What is the true nature of the US-Iran agreement?
- Will Trump's denial impact the signing?



