Oil prices climb as Trump insists afraid Iran wants deal to end war despite rejecting US plan - live updates

Oil prices climbed again today as markets reacted to Iran dismissing a US proposal to end the war despite Donald Trump insisting leaders in Tehran badly want a deal to stop the conflict.


Oil prices climbed again today as markets reacted to Iran dismissing a US proposal to end the war despite Donald Trump insisting leaders in Tehran badly want a deal to stop the conflict.

The price of Brent crude rose nearly 2 per cent to $104 per barrel after Iran rejected Trumps 15-point plan and set out its five own conditions to end the war.

The President has insisted Iranian leaders are eager to agree a deal despite their initial objections.

They are negotiating, by the way, and they want to make a deal so badly. But theyre afraid to say it, because they figure theyll be killed by their own people, Trump said last night at a dinner for Republican members of Congress.

Follow the latest updates on the US-Israel war with Iran 

06:27

Trump accuses Iranian leadership of being 'too frightened' to admit they're negotiating

President Trump said that Iran's leadership are 'too frightened' to admit they're negotiating with America on peace talks, as they would be 'killed by their own people' for doing so.

Trump was addressing the audience at a fundraising event in Washington DC that despite Tehran's denials that it was involved in formal talks with the US, the country was talking to Trump and 'desperately wanted to bring an end to the conflict'.

Iran's Foreign Minister noted that messages exchanged by friendly countries through a back channel did not constitute a dialogue.

He added that Iran viewed any form of negotiation as an 'admission of defeat'.

It comes as the Trump administration threatened to 'unleash hell' if it's demands were not met.

Further missiles have been exchanged between Israel and Iran.

06:23

British woman jailed in Iran has 'made peace' with chance of dying

The British woman jailed alongside her husband for 10 years in Iran on spying charges says she has come to accept she may die behind bars as bombs hit the country.

Speaking from prison, Lindsay Foreman told ITV News that the 'whistling noise of missiles and the hum of the drones' could be heard close to where she and her partner Craig are being detained.

The 53-year-olds were jailed after being arrested in January last year while travelling through Iran on a round-the-world motorcycle trip.

Ms Foreman, in her first interview since the US and Israel launched strikes against Iran on February 28, said: 'When the bombs were going off at night, in those first four nights, we were all hiding under the bed.

'So we were in metal-framed bunk beds and we would get into the bottom bunk. People were hyperventilating, screaming.

'The first day you could feel it, the impact of the bombs, the rockets, the missiles.'

Talking about prison conditions, Ms Foreman said: 'When the buildings shake, there is nowhere to go. These buildings are not designed for safety.

'There's no fire escape, there's no access to the outside for us. If the building collapses, that will be the end.

'And sometimes just living it, just accepting it, just knowing that there is a chance of dying and making peace with that.'

The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) warns all British and British-Iranian nationals not to travel to Iran because of a 'significant risk of arrest, questioning or detention'.

A spokesperson previously described the jail sentences the pair received as 'completely appalling and totally unjustifiable', saying their welfare is a 'priority' for the Government.

Ms Foreman said she empathises with the efforts of UK diplomats since they were detained.

She added: 'Sometimes we just have to take responsibility for the situation we find ourselves in, that we create.

'I chose to come here. I'm not going to blame the [UK] Government for that.'

(FILES) A handout photograph released in London on August 4, 2025 by the family of Craig and Lindsay Foreman, shows Craig and Lindsay at Naqsh-e Jahan Square, or Shah Square, with the Shah Mosque in the background, in Isfahan, Iran, at an undated time. The British couple detained in Iran since January 2025 have been sentenced to 10 years in jail for espionage, their family announced on February 19, 2026 as they hit out at their treatment. Lindsay and Craig Foreman were arrested while travelling through the country on an around-the-world motorcycle journey and have consistently denied Tehran's spying claims. (Photo by FAMILY HANDOUT / AFP via Getty Images) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT

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IranBenjamin NetanyahuIsraelDonald Trump
Источник: Daily Online

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