Trump says Iran and Israel have agreed to a 'complete and total ceasefire'
President Donald Trump said on Monday, June 23, on social media that Israel and Iran have agreed to a "complete and total ceasefire" to be phased in over 24 hours.
The US president said on Truth Social that the ceasefire would bring an "Official END" to the war, a major change in the hostilities that follows a US strike over the weekend on three Iranian nuclear sites. "On the assumption that everything works as it should, which it will, I would like to congratulate both Countries, Israel and Iran, on having the Stamina, Courage, and Intelligence to end, what should be called, 'THE 12 DAY WAR,'" Trump posted.
Earlier, Trump thanked Iran for giving the US and allies "early notice" of Monday's retaliatory missile strike aimed at a major US military installation in the Gulf nation of Qatar. The president expressed hope that Tehran − with its reprisal for the US bombardment of three key Iranian nuclear facilities − had "gotten it all out of their 'system'" and that the moment would lead to a de-escalation in the Israel-Iran war.
"I am pleased to report that NO Americans were harmed, and hardly any damage was done," Trump said on social media. "I want to thank Iran for giving us early notice, which made it possible for no lives to be lost, and nobody to be injured. Perhaps Iran can now proceed to Peace and Harmony in the Region, and I will enthusiastically encourage Israel to do the same."
The Iranian attack on US forces at Qatar's Al Udeid Air Base marked Tehran's first act of direct retaliation against the US since Trump ordered strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities. Trump said Iran launched 14 missiles at the base, a sprawling facility that hosts the forward headquarters of the US military's Central Command and was a major staging ground during the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The base houses some 8,000 US troops, down from about 10,000 at the height of those wars. The president said 13 of the Iranian missiles "were knocked down," by US air defense systems while one was "'set free' because it was headed in a nonthreatening direction."
Hours before Iran launched its attack on Monday, the US Embassy in Qatar issued an alert on its website urging American citizens in the energy-rich nation to "shelter in place until further notice." The Qatari government issued an extraordinary order to shut its busy airspace.
As for Iran's future, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Monday appeared to play down Trump calling into question the future of Iran's ruling theocracy, seemingly contradicting his administration's earlier calls on Tehran to resume negotiations and avoid an escalation in fighting. "It's not politically correct to use the term, 'Regime Change,' but if the current Iranian Regime is unable to MAKE IRAN GREAT AGAIN, why wouldn't there be a Regime change???" Trump posted on social media. "MIGA!!!" Leavitt said Trump's "posture and our military posture has not changed. The president was just simply raising a question that I think many people around the world are asking."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
LeMonde
35 minutes ago
- LeMonde
US attacks Iran, thrusting Middle East war into total uncertainty
The United States has entered a new war in the Middle East, under the leadership of President Donald Trump, who had previously sworn only by peace, trade and putting American interests first. On Saturday, June 21, Washington met Israel's expectations and carried out a large-scale air force operation against Iran, aimed at crippling its nuclear program permanently. After pretending to hesitate for a week, Trump took a historic risk that his predecessors, from George W. Bush to Joe Biden, had all refused to accept. He green-lighted the deployment of B-2 bombers in the region to target three sites: Natanz, a uranium enrichment facility that had already been damaged by Israeli airstrikes; Isfahan, where significant stocks of fissile material were reportedly stored; and Fordo, the most deeply buried facility, dug into the foot of a mountain. In a message posted on his social media platform, Truth Social, shortly before 8 pm in Washington, Trump announced the operation as a "very successful attack," even though the exact assessment of the strikes' impacts had not yet been completed. "All the planes are now out of Iranian airspace," said the president, specifying that a "full payload of BOMBS" had been dropped on the most sensitive target, Fordo. At 9 pm, on the conservative channel Fox News, host Sean Hannity, an ardent supporter of the operation and one of the White House's main propagandists, announced that he had just spoken to Trump. The president had confirmed to him that six GBU-57 bunker-buster bombs, each weighing over 13.5 metric tons, had been dropped on Fordo. Iran's nuclear ambitions "are officially dead," declared Hannity, ecstatic.
LeMonde
35 minutes ago
- LeMonde
The challenges of a 'Pax Hebraica' in the Middle East
On February 2 of this year, Benjamin Netanyahu prepared to fly to Washington for a first meeting with Donald Trump since the latter's return to the Oval Office. On the tarmac at Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion Airport, the Israeli prime minister outlined his vision: "The decisions we made in the war have already changed the face of the Middle East. Our decisions and the courage of our soldiers have redrawn the map. But I believe that working closely with President Trump, we can redraw it even further and for the better." Less than six months later, the bombarding of Iran's main nuclear sites by the most powerful army in the world during the night of Saturday, June 21, to Sunday, June 22, confirmed the triumph of Israel, which in only a few months has become the sheriff of the Middle East. Of course, the US has always voiced unambiguous opposition to the Iranian regime, and especially to its nuclear program. Yet, the Israeli prime minister managed to enlist, at a moment of his choosing, a US president who, upon taking office on January 20, insisted that his success would be measured "by the wars that we end, and perhaps most importantly, the wars we never get into." The bombings serve as a final epitaph to the blindness of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, killed in October 2024. With the terrorist attack of October 7, 2023, he not only pushed his militia to the ultimate stage of barbarity, thereby discrediting the armed struggle he claimed to lead, but also took down with him the "axis of resistance" that the Iranian regime set up over decades by exploiting regional imbalances, the fate of Shiite minorities and the persistent Palestinian question. Where the US invasion of Iraq in 2003 boosted support for this "axis," Israel's moves have now reduced it to rubble. Hezbollah has remained on standby since the start of the Israeli bombing campaign against Iran on June 13, as have the Iraqi Shiite militias. The military capabilities of the Houthis in Yemen remain marginal, while the new Syrian regime, born out of jihadism, could only welcome the unprecedented weakening of a Shiite regime capable of posing a threat to it.


France 24
an hour ago
- France 24
Flatterer-in-chief: How NATO's Rutte worked to win over Trump
Now, on the eve of hosting his first alliance summit as boss in his hometown, The Hague, the veteran political operator seems on the verge of delivering. With a combination of diplomatic finessing and a large dose of flattery, Rutte looks set to make the volatile US leader happy with a carefully crafted deal that meets Trump's demand for NATO allies to spend five percent of GDP on defence. "He's been quite masterful in keeping the alliance together in a very difficult and sensitive period," a senior NATO diplomat said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Rutte's tour de force was cooking up a compromise on spending that allows Trump to claim victory by hitting his headline five-percent figure, while in reality setting the bar lower. The agreement sees countries promise to spend 3.5 percent of GDP on core military spending, while the other 1.5 percent goes to a looser array of areas like infrastructure and cybersecurity. Getting a successful outcome for NATO, the transatlantic alliance forged during the Cold War, was by no means a given when Trump stormed back into the White House threatening allies he would not protect them if they did not cough up. As Washington berated Ukraine, cosied up to Russia and opened the door to pulling forces from Europe, it set alarm bells ringing over the future of an alliance founded on US might. Rutte's strategy has seemed relatively simple: never criticise or contradict the notoriously sensitive former reality TV star. Pain from Spain When Trump suggested Ukraine caused Russia's invasion: silence. When he yelled at Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office: no pushback. When he threatened not to protect allies: nothing to see here. Instead, according to Rutte, Trump has been absolutely right to demand a quick end to the Ukraine war, has not called into question NATO's mutual defence ethos, and has actually made the alliance stronger by forcing allies to spend more. All that courting appears to have paid off. Diplomats say Rutte is one of only a handful of European leaders Trump willingly picks up the phone to and that the two text each other. "Clearly the job is to keep the United States engaged as far as you can, even if it means that you have to sound a bit like Donald Trump occasionally," said Jamie Shea, a former senior NATO official now with the Chatham House think tank. "So as long as that's the situation, I think allies will sort of turn a blind eye in Europe, at least to the occasional uses of Trumpian means and themes" by Rutte. That does not mean European allies have always been comfortable with Rutte's performance -- with some at times accusing him of going too far to please Trump. That very nearly ended up blowing up in Rutte's face when Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez threw a last-minute spanner in the works by baulking at the spending deal. In the end though, Rutte again showed his diplomatic chops and managed to smooth over the kerfuffle with another sleight of hand that allowed all sides to claim they got what they wanted. "Hats off to Rutte's artistry," said another NATO diplomat. "Once again we saw his touch." © 2025 AFP