President Trump states the U.S. is currently in negotiations with Iran, facilitated by envoys including Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff, along with Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Vice President JD Vance.
Claims the Iranian side "would like to make a deal," framing it as a rational choice given their weakened state.
Provides a stark military assessment of Iran, asserting its Navy and Air Force are "gone," communications are "gone," anti-aircraft systems are "gone," and most missiles have been destroyed or expended.
Argues this degradation of military capability is so severe it hinders internal communication and coordination within Iran.
Contrasts his assessment with media portrayals, claiming U.S. forces are "roaming free over Tehran" and can "do whatever we want," suggesting minimal operational resistance.
Gives a specific example of leverage: U.S. forces held off on a planned strike that would have collapsed "a very big electric generation plant, one of the biggest in the world" because negotiations are ongoing.
The core implication is that negotiations are proceeding from a position of overwhelming U.S. military dominance and coercive leverage, with the threat of immediate, catastrophic infrastructure destruction serving as a key bargaining chip.