# [WARNING] Trump Rejects Iran Peace Reply; Tehran Won’t Dismantle Nuclear Sites

*Sunday, May 10, 2026 at 9:08 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-10T21:08:49.134Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: US, Iran, Israel, Nuclear, MiddleEast, Energy, Oil, Diplomacy
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/6391.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 20:15–20:45 UTC, President Trump publicly declared Iran’s response to the latest U.S. peace proposal “totally unacceptable,” while the Wall Street Journal reports Iran has rejected dismantling its nuclear facilities. This is a significant setback for negotiations that have been tying together a regional ceasefire, sanctions, the Hormuz blockade, and Iran’s nuclear program, increasing the risk of prolonged conflict and sustained energy market stress.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

From 20:15 to about 20:45 UTC on 10 May 2026, a series of public statements signaled a sharp hardening of positions in the U.S.–Iran negotiation track:

- At 20:15 UTC (Report 16) and reiterated around 20:38 UTC (Report 1), President Trump stated he had read the response from Iran’s “so‑called representatives” to the latest peace proposal and labeled it “TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE” and “completely unacceptable.”
- At 20:36–20:41 UTC (Report 14), Trump told Axios he will reject Iran’s response to the latest draft agreement aimed at ending the war, saying, “I don’t like their letter. It’s inappropriate. I don’t like their response,” and confirmed he had spoken with Israeli PM Netanyahu the same day.
- Around 20:31 UTC (Report 3), a Wall Street Journal–cited report surfaced that Iran has rejected dismantling its nuclear facilities.
- At 20:57 UTC (Report 11), Iran’s Tasnim, quoting an Iranian source, dismissed Trump’s reaction and emphasized that negotiators act for Iran’s national interest, framing Trump’s unhappiness as a positive sign from Tehran’s perspective.

These come against the backdrop of existing alerts about Iran linking uranium disposition, sanctions relief, Hormuz access, and ceasefire terms.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

On the U.S. side, the decisive voice is President Trump, signaling an executive-level decision to reject Iran’s written response. The remarks were made directly by him, not intermediaries, suggesting the White House is locking in a harder line.

On the Iranian side, the WSJ report implies decisions at or near Supreme National Security Council/Leader level regarding nuclear infrastructure, while Tasnim’s sourced comments reflect a sanctioned narrative that Tehran is not backing down under U.S. pressure.

Israel is indirectly involved: Trump acknowledged a call with Netanyahu on Sunday, indicating coordination or at least close consultation with Israel as Washington shapes its response.

3. Immediate military and security implications

- Negotiation stall: The explicit U.S. rejection and Iran’s refusal to dismantle nuclear facilities materially reduce the near‑term likelihood of a comprehensive deal that would jointly address nuclear issues, regional ceasefire, and maritime de‑escalation.
- Escalation risk: The failure of this phase of talks raises the probability that pressure will shift back toward military and covert options—continued or expanded maritime interdiction by the U.S. and allies, potential Israeli or U.S. kinetic actions against Iranian assets, and Iranian asymmetric responses via proxies or missile/drone attacks.
- Regional posture: Given the pre‑existing U.S.–Iran naval standoff and Iran’s prior pressure around Hormuz, the risk remains of renewed targeting of shipping or energy infrastructure if Tehran seeks leverage.

4. Market and economic impact

Energy: With the diplomatic track faltering, markets will likely price a longer-lived geopolitical risk premium:
- Crude oil and refined products: Expect firming prices or upside volatility as traders discount the prospect of continued tension around Hormuz and no imminent sanctions relief. Any sign of follow-on military moves or shipping incidents would amplify this.
- LNG and regional gas: Indirect but supportive effect due to elevated Middle East risk and the potential for broader energy disruptions.

Safe havens and FX:
- Gold: Mild safe-haven bid as the probability of a negotiated de‑escalation decreases.
- USD: Modest support as a risk-off hedge; some pressure on regional EM FX exposed to energy imports and geopolitical risk.

Equities and credit:
- Energy equities and defense names may benefit from higher risk premia and expectations of sustained defense demand.
- Israeli and regional markets are vulnerable to renewed escalation risk; European industrials and transport/logistics could underperform on higher energy and shipping costs.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- U.S. messaging: Expect formal U.S. statements clarifying that Iran’s proposal is rejected, possibly outlining red lines on nuclear dismantlement and regional behavior.
- Iranian response: Tehran will likely double down publicly on its nuclear red lines while offering limited tactical flexibility to avoid appearing intransigent. Watch for calibrated rhetorical escalation and references to alternative partners (Russia/China).
- Israeli posture: Jerusalem may leverage the breakdown to push Washington toward tougher measures; intelligence and military readiness against Iran and proxies could increase.
- Markets: Traders will reassess probabilities of a ceasefire and sanctions relief. If no new military incidents occur, moves may be contained to a modest risk bid in oil and gold; any concurrent maritime or proxy attack would significantly magnify market reaction.

Overall, the day’s statements mark a clear negative inflection in the diplomatic trajectory, keeping the Middle East conflict risk and associated market volatility elevated.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
The hardening of U.S.–Iran positions lowers odds of a negotiated off-ramp in the short term, keeping geopolitical risk premia elevated in crude and refined products, especially given the existing Iran naval blockade and prior hits on Russian refining. Expect support for oil prices and related volatility, marginal safe-haven flows into gold and the dollar, and downside pressure on risk assets most exposed to Middle East escalation (Israeli assets, regional EM FX) and on European industrials sensitive to energy costs.
