đŸ”„đŸššBREAKING: IRAN REJECTS ALL US NUCLEAR DEMANDS — DIPLOMACY HITS DEAD END, TENSIONS SHARPLY RISE đŸ‡źđŸ‡·đŸ‡ș🇾

$DENT $POWER $RAVE

According to the Wall Street Journal, Iran has rejected every major demand presented by the U.S. delegation during recent negotiations. The American team, reportedly led by Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, delivered some of the toughest conditions seen in years.

The U.S. demands included:

→ Destroying three main nuclear sites — Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan

→ Transferring all remaining enriched uranium to the United States

→ Permanently halting all uranium enrichment

→ Accepting a deal with no expiration date, meaning restrictions would never end

Iran rejected every single point.

This is a major moment. Destroying facilities like Fordow and Natanz would dismantle the core of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure. Sending all enriched uranium abroad would remove its most sensitive material. And a permanent deal with no “sunset clause” would mean Iran could never restart enrichment legally under that agreement.

From Tehran’s perspective, these terms likely cross red lines tied to sovereignty and national security. From Washington’s side, officials argue such measures are necessary to prevent long-term nuclear risks.

Now the big question is: what happens next? When negotiations collapse at this level, pressure usually increases — through sanctions, regional military positioning, or diplomatic isolation. Markets are watching oil prices, and regional allies are on alert.

For now, diplomacy appears stuck. The gap between both sides looks wider than ever — and the next move could shape the future of Middle East stability. đŸŒâš–ïžđŸ”„