Translation result.

President Donald Trump warned that if the United States and Iran ultimately fail to reach an agreement, hostilities between the two countries would resume and any attacks would become larger and more powerful than before.
On the 23rd (local time), Trump posted on his social platform Truth Social that talks with Iran were progressing, but that if they do not yield a strong deal, the nations would revert to a state of confrontation.
He said a collapse of negotiations would lead to “attacks bigger and stronger than before,” and added that no one wants that outcome.
Trump also argued that, given the extensive U.S. effort to resolve this complex puzzle, “these countries should, at a minimum, be required to sign the Abraham Accords.” He said one or two countries might have reasons not to join and that would be acceptable, but he maintained that most should be ready, willing and able to make any Iran deal far more historic than it would otherwise be.
He listed Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan and Bahrain — leaders he said he spoke with by phone on the 23rd — and said he urged them to join the Abraham Accords, which normalize diplomatic ties with Israel.
Trump asserted that the Abraham Accords have produced financial, economic and social benefits without any member withdrawing or suspending participation, even amid current conflicts. He declared that the accords would bring true power, stability and peace to the Middle East for the first time in the region’s 5,000-year history and would be respected above any other document in the world.
He called for Saudi Arabia and Qatar to sign immediately and for other countries to follow, saying those who refuse to join display ill intent and should be excluded from the Iran agreement. He added that several leaders told him they would consider it an honor to join the Abraham Accords.
The Abraham Accords were signed on Sept. 15, 2020, when Israel, the UAE and Bahrain — under U.S. mediation — declared full diplomatic normalization. Since then, Sudan, Morocco and Kazakhstan have also signed agreements with Israel and established diplomatic relations.











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