Khaberni - President Donald Trump has threatened to "unleash hell" if Tehran does not agree to a deal that ends the war in the Middle East, according to the White House on Wednesday.
White House spokeswoman Carolyn Levitt said at a press conference on Wednesday evening, "If Iran does not accept the reality of the current moment and does not understand that it has been militarily defeated and will continue to be defeated, President Trump will ensure that a stronger strike than ever before will be directed at it."
She added that "President Trump is not making idle threats, and he is ready to unleash hell. Iran should not miscalculate again".
She also mentioned that the United States is closely watching how oil tankers navigate the Strait of Hormuz.
This comes after Iranian television reported from a responsible source that Tehran had rejected the American proposal to stop the war.
Late Tuesday evening, a fifteen-point plan from President Donald Trump's administration was presented.
This document - according to the Associated Press - provides a potential path for ending the war, for Iran via Pakistan. So far, Tehran has denied any negotiations.
Pakistan, Egypt, and Gulf states are covertly seeking to establish dialogue, but their efforts are still in their initial stages. Israel pledges to continue its attacks.
Trump referred to meetings that took place on Sunday between his envoy Steve Witkoff and his son-in-law Jared Kushner with an Iranian official, without revealing their identity.
Reports circulated the name of Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, but he quickly denied this via his account on "X".
According to three Pakistani officials, an Egyptian official, and a Gulf diplomat who spoke to the Associated Press, the United States has "in principle" agreed to join the talks in Pakistan, while mediators continue to convince Iran.
The Egyptian official said that the efforts are focused on "building trust" between the United States and Iran, aiming to reach a truce in the fighting and a "mechanism" to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
According to the sources, the Trump administration delivered a 15-point peace plan to Iran through mediators from Pakistan, who offered to host renewed negotiations.



