Iranians voice anger as United States signs ceasefire deal with Tehran after more than 100 days of war
People in Iran are reacting with anger and disappointment after the United States signed a memorandum of understanding with Tehran to end hostilities. The agreement comes after more than 100 days of war, according to the supplied material, and follows a period of severe disruption inside Iran. Those interviewed described feeling betrayed by the deal and said they had expected a different outcome from the conflict.
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The row says the memorandum of understanding was signed between Washington and Tehran, and that Donald Trump told reporters in France he had signed the deal. It also says the war began on 28 February, when the United States and Israel launched an attack on Iran. The supplied material states that the conflict killed Iran's then-supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and led to months of wider instability.
The impact described in the source goes beyond the battlefield. It says the conflict caused countless deaths, disrupted global shipping and created economic pain across the world. Inside Iran, people were cut off from the world for more than 12 weeks before coming back online, and some said the country had become far worse since the war began.
One Tehran resident, identified only as Sahar to protect her identity, said the nation was depressed and distressed. The deal matters because it appears to pause a conflict that had already spread consequences well beyond Iran's borders. The source says the issue of Iran's nuclear capabilities has been pushed into a 60-day negotiation period aimed at securing a final peace agreement.
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It also says the question of regime change, which had been raised at the start of the war, has now been set aside by the US president, at least for the moment. The supplied material places the agreement against the backdrop of a war that began with Western attacks in late February. In an eight-minute video posted at the time, Trump said the United States had carried out Operation Epic Fury to end what he described as Iran's nuclear threat.
He also called on the Iranian people to seize control of their destiny and build a prosperous future, language that now sits uneasily with the anger expressed by some Iranians over the ceasefire deal. For many of those who had taken part in anti-regime protests, the agreement has been especially difficult to accept. The source says some believed the war might lead to the fall of the Islamic Republic, and that the interim deal has destroyed that hope.
Their reaction suggests the ceasefire is being read not only as a diplomatic shift, but also as a political disappointment for people who had expected change inside Iran. The article also points to a broader sense of uncertainty about what comes next. Iranians quoted in the material asked where they now stand and said that no one had spoken about the suffering of ordinary people.
The next stage is the 60-day negotiation period mentioned in the source, but it remains unclear whether that process will produce a final peace agreement or whether tensions will re-emerge.
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