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Trump, ever the unreliable narrator, is unable to force reality to match his preferred story
Donald Trump speaks to the press before boarding Air Force One at the John F Kennedy international airport, in New York, on 9 June 2026. Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images View image in fullscreen Donald Trump speaks to the press before boarding Air Force One at the John F Kennedy international airport, in New York, on 9 June 2026. Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images Analysis Trump, ever the unreliable narrator, is unable to force reality to match his preferred story on Iran Andrew Roth in Washington A cycle of threat, detente and deadlock repeats itself wearisomely as the president’s war in Iran drags on US politics live – latest updates As the story of the US-Iran war is written direct to social media, Donald Trump may be the genre’s premier unreliable narrator. Since the war began, Trump has again and again threatened Iran with fearsome consequences if Tehran doesn’t come to the table and sign a peace deal that the US president said was imminent weeks ago. And he has also repeatedly claimed that an Iran deal is “close” – without any result. (A CNN tally put the number of times he’s claimed it at 38.) Never mind that the US has already claimed “complete victory” in the conflict and Trump has attacked reporters who have questioned the wisdom of the intervention, particularly as the strait of Hormuz remains closed to more than 20% of global oil traffic. Middle East peace talks in doubt as Iran says it needs to ‘reassess’ after overnight strikes Read more Even so, he continues to seek to have it both ways: both declaring Iran vanquished and painting the country’s stubbornness as the reason why he can’t sign a peace deal and end the conflict. “The Bully of the Middle East is DEAD!!!” he wrote in a missive on Monday. “They’ve taken too long to negotiate a deal that would have been great for them, now they will have to pay the price!!!” The US president was posting after a US Apache helicopter was downed off the coast of Oman by an Iranian drone, despite claims from both Trump and the Pentagon chief, Pete Hegseth, that Iran “[doesn’t] have anti-aircraft, they don’t have radar”. That does not quite seem the case. Iran’s missile and drone attacks have continued against nearby US allies in Kuwait, Bahrain and Jordan. In retaliation for the downing of the Apache helicopter, the US managed to strike more than 20 sites in Iran including radar and anti-aircraft sites, according to US officials. And on Wednesday in the Oval Office, Trump warned of a fierce response from the US but also said that a deal was within reach. “We’re gonna hit ’em again hard today … and we’ll see what happens with a deal,” he said. “We’re really close to a deal but they keep on tapping us along, they keep playing us for suckers.” The barrage and whiplash of White House claims of imminent deals and then threats that “a whole civilization will die tonight” have kept Trump squarely where he wants to be – dominating the news cycle – but they’ve also increasingly eroded trust in