U.S. President Donald Trump said Iran requested a renewal of talks and that delegations will meet Monday in Doha, according to the statement. The development follows weeks of accelerated U.S.-Iran deal diplomacy in which Trump has described the talks in increasingly concrete terms.
U.S. President Donald Trump stated Monday afternoon that Iran had requested a renewal of meetings and that delegations will now meet Monday in Doha, correcting an earlier report that the meeting was set for Tuesday. The announcement, carried by an Israeli source that tracks breaking news, confirms a new round of U.S.-Iran talks after weeks of on-again, off-again diplomacy.
As The Zioneer reported earlier, the story was first published at 14:32 Jerusalem with Trump's claim that Iran requested a Doha meeting. The initial version stated the meeting would be Monday; later updates at the same timestamp shifted it to Tuesday, then back to Monday per Israeli journalist Amit Segal (N12). The current bulletin, at 14:36 Jerusalem, has the delegations meeting on Monday. Throughout the thread, the claim has relied on a single U.S. source — Trump himself — without independent corroboration from Iran or other parties.
This development fits into a broader pattern of accelerated diplomacy. As The Zioneer reported on June 9, Trump said the U.S. "may have an idea within a day or two" about the talks. On June 11, the Qatari Emir discussed deal progress with Trump, and on June 13 a senior U.S. official said Trump would convene a Middle East summit in France. Earlier, on June 21, a single unverified report claimed Trump had agreed to a private meeting with Iran's Supreme Leader.
What remains open: whether this Monday meeting is a new session or a continuation of previously reported contacts, and whether any deal framework is imminent. Trump's statement remains the only on-record U.S. confirmation of the meeting so far, with no official Iranian acknowledgment.
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