--- title: "Trump's Last-Minute TACO: Intermediaries Scramble, Multiple Plan Revisions in a Day, Iranian Top Leadership Clinches Deal Amidst Behind-the-Scenes Chaos" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/281994969.md" description: "The US-Iran ceasefire was reached through a high-stakes diplomatic game. Mediators from Pakistan, Turkey, and Egypt shuttled back and forth, with drafts revised multiple times in a single day. A breakthrough finally emerged after a handwritten note from the reclusive Iranian leader Mojtaba Khamenei. Ironically, until the official announcement, White House aides and the Pentagon remained in a fog of war preparation due to Trump’s \"maximum pressure\" rhetoric. This chaotic and secretive game has temporarily pressed the pause button on conflict" datetime: "2026-04-08T07:49:24.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/281994969.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281994969.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281994969.md) --- # Trump's Last-Minute TACO: Intermediaries Scramble, Multiple Plan Revisions in a Day, Iranian Top Leadership Clinches Deal Amidst Behind-the-Scenes Chaos This crisis, which nearly plunged the Middle East into all-out war, has temporarily concluded with a two-week ceasefire agreement. According to a report by CCTV News, Iran's Supreme National Security Council announced early on the 8th local time that, based on the recommendation of the Supreme Leader and approval by the council, it accepted the ceasefire proposal put forward by Pakistan. As previously reported by Wallstreetcn.com, Trump's dramatic reversal—from threatening that "entire civilizations will perish" to a "two-week ceasefire"—took only ten hours and twenty-six minutes. However, the diplomatic process behind it was far more chaotic than the public narrative suggests. According to Axios, **mediators from Pakistan, Turkey, and Egypt shuttled back and forth between the two sides to deliver proposals, with the draft revised several times within a single day**, and it was only after Iran's top leader Mojtaba Khamenei personally gave the final nod that the agreement took shape. Before the ceasefire announcement was finalized, the direction of the situation was virtually impossible for anyone to predict. US troops stationed in the Middle East and Pentagon officials were still preparing for large-scale bombing of Iranian infrastructure in the final hours of negotiations; Trump's close allies and aides generally believed he would reject the agreement just an hour or two before he posted his acceptance. A US defense official admitted afterward: "We had absolutely no idea what was going to happen; it was complete chaos." The ceasefire order has temporarily prevented further escalation, but divisions are far from resolved. A significant gap remains between the US and Iranian visions for the final agreement, and the possibility of renewed conflict is real. Vice President Vance is expected to lead the US delegation to follow-up negotiations scheduled for this Friday in Pakistan, which will be the most significant diplomatic task of his political career to date. ## Drafts Revised Multiple Times a Day, Three Nations Shuttle in Mediation On Monday morning, while Trump was attending Easter celebration activities at the White House, US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff was already "fuming" and working the phones relentlessly. According to media reports citing a source with direct knowledge, Witkoff informed various intermediaries that the 10-point counterproposal just submitted by Iran "was a disaster, a catastrophe." This statement kicked off a series of "chaotic" negotiation revisions that day. **Pakistani mediators shuttled the latest draft between Witkoff and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, with the foreign ministers of Egypt and Turkey also actively involved, attempting to bridge the gap between the two sides.** The involvement of multiple intermediaries in rotation made the entire process highly fragmented. After a full day of back-and-forth consultations, mediators received US approval late Monday night for an updated two-week ceasefire proposal. At this point, the ball was in Mojtaba Khamenei's court. ## Khamenei Personally Clinches the Deal, Communication Methods Highly Secretive The direct intervention of Iran's Supreme Leader was the core turning point of these negotiations. According to media reports citing an Israeli official, a regional official, and a third knowledgeable source, Khamenei instructed negotiators on Monday for the first time since the war's outbreak to move toward reaching an agreement—a shift described as a "breakthrough" by two sources. Due to the threat of assassination by Israel, Khamenei's communication methods are extremely secretive, **primarily relying on handwritten notes delivered by hand for communication, making his involvement necessarily circuitous and time-consuming.** Throughout Monday and Tuesday, all major decisions had to be reviewed by Khamenei. "Without his green light, there would be no agreement," said the aforementioned regional source. Foreign Minister Araghchi also played a pivotal role throughout the process—not only leading the specific negotiations but also playing a key part in persuading commanders of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to accept the agreement. ## White House Insiders Kept in the Dark, Ceasefire Hanging until the Last Minute Even by Tuesday, the situation remained murky. Trump issued his most deterrent threat that day: "Tonight, a civilization will perish." Some US media reported based on this that Iran had withdrawn from negotiations, but according to Axios citing sources related to the talks, the opposite was true; there was actually some forward momentum at the time. **Vance was in Hungary at the time, mediating via telephone and primarily coordinating with the Pakistani side.** Around noon on Tuesday (Eastern Time), the parties reached a general consensus on the two-week ceasefire plan. Three hours later, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif posted the ceasefire terms on X and called on both sides to accept. However, Trump immediately began receiving calls and messages from hawkish allies and confidants, urging him to reject the agreement. The chaos surrounding Trump’s decision-making reached its peak. Several people who had spoken with Trump just one or two hours prior still firmly believed he would not accept the ceasefire, right up until he actually posted. Before posting, Trump first called Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu to confirm his commitment to abide by the ceasefire; he then called Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff and Field Marshal Asim Munir to formally finalize the agreement. Fifteen minutes after Trump's post, the US military received orders to stand down. ## Ceasefire Implementation, Multiple Uncertainties Remain Following the agreement, Araghchi immediately issued a statement saying Iran would abide by the ceasefire and would open the Strait of Hormuz to vessels "coordinating their actions with the Iranian armed forces." However, the phrasing of the statement itself left room for suspense—**it remains unclear to what extent Iran will allow shipping to return to normal.** There are also variables on the Israeli side. A senior Israeli official told Axios that Netanyahu had received assurances from the US that they would insist on Iran handing over nuclear materials, halting uranium enrichment, and abandoning ballistic missile threats during the peace talks. However, Netanyahu's commitment to the ceasefire remains to be seen—Israeli officials have expressed deep concern about gradually losing control over the process. The fundamental differences between the US and Iranian visions for the final agreement have not been reconciled, and the risk of renewed conflict is real. Whether the Pakistani negotiations on Friday can transform this fragile ceasefire into a lasting framework will be the critical moment to assess the quality of this last-minute diplomatic gambit. ## Related News & Research - [Pete Buttigieg shreds CNBC host on Trump’s Iran war and inflation](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282394324.md) - [U.S. envoys Witkoff, Kushner arrive in Pakistan's Islamabad for talks with Iran - Pakistani source](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282405581.md) - [Iran's Qalibaf says ready for deal if U.S. offers genuine agreement and grant Iran its rights](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282392457.md) - [Hegseth: New Iranian regime has a different interaction with U.S.](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282040881.md) - [Turkish intelligence played a role securing U.S.-Iran ceasefire, media says](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282042257.md)