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Page 470 of 496
No. 550
Filed JUNE 28, 2026
Foreign Policy
Second Term

Trump Assures Nation The Iran Ceasefire Is Holding As Iranian Missiles Strike Two U.S. Bases In The Gulf, Resolving Long-Standing Concern That His Peace Deal Was Not Yet Putting American Troops Under Fire

The Filing

WASHINGTON. President Donald J. Trump reassured the country Sunday that the ceasefire he negotiated with Iran remained firmly in place, hours after Iranian ballistic missiles and drones struck two American military installations in Kuwait and Bahrain in retaliation for the U.S. airstrikes he had ordered to enforce it.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said it had targeted Ali Al Salem Air Base in Kuwait and the home port of the U.S. Fifth Fleet in Bahrain, the latest exchange in a conflict the President has repeatedly described as concluded. The strikes followed a Saturday operation in which U.S. forces hit five Iranian targets, a step the administration characterized as ordinary upkeep of a peace agreement.

"Negotiations are going very well," the President wrote on social media, characterizing Iran's decision to fire on American troops as a "foolish violation" of the deal both sides had pledged to honor. He warned that the United States could yet be "forced to militarily complete the job," after which, he added, "the Islamic Republic of Iran will no longer exist."

A senior administration official confirmed that the ceasefire was working precisely as intended, explaining that any agreement capable of producing this volume of incoming fire was, by definition, being taken seriously by all parties. The official noted that the absence of a formal declaration of war stood as further evidence of the President's restraint.

Pentagon officials said early Sunday that the Iranian missiles had failed to hit their targets, a result the White House cited as proof that the peace was holding. The governments of Kuwait and Bahrain, which host the bases now absorbing the consequences of the agreement, condemned the strikes as violations of their sovereignty and asked to be informed the next time their territory was scheduled to benefit from American diplomacy.

At press time, the President had declared the war both over and winnable, the ceasefire both intact and under attack, and the negotiations both finished and ongoing, resolving any lingering confusion about whether the United States was currently at peace.

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