# [WARNING] Trump Delays Iran Strike 2–3 Days Amid Gulf-Led Talks

*Monday, May 18, 2026 at 10:27 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-18T22:27:04.233Z (3h ago)
**Tags**: US, Iran, MiddleEast, GulfStates, Oil, Geopolitics, Markets
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/7272.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: At around 21:59–22:03 UTC on 18 May, Donald Trump stated that a planned U.S. military attack on Iran, scheduled for ‘tomorrow,’ has been postponed by 2–3 days after Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE requested more time for negotiations. He said ‘serious negotiations are now taking place’ and that there is ‘a very good chance’ a deal can be reached. This represents a critical short‑term de‑escalation in a near‑immediate U.S.–Iran strike scenario while leaving a narrow decision window that will keep markets and regional actors on edge.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

Between 21:59 and 22:03 UTC on 18 May 2026, multiple posts relayed new public remarks by Donald Trump regarding U.S. military plans against Iran:
- Report 29 (21:59:48 UTC) quotes Trump on Truth Social saying he agreed to hold off on a ‘planned military attack’ on Iran, which was ‘scheduled for tomorrow,’ after requests from the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar. He states that ‘serious negotiations are now taking place’ and that he expects a deal.
- Report 16 (22:02:55 UTC) adds that the attack has been postponed by ‘2–3 days’ because Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE believe they are getting ‘very close to making a deal.’
- Report 6 (21:46:43 UTC) notes Trump has updated Israel on the decision to delay the attack.
- Report 12 (22:02:55 UTC) quotes Trump saying there seems to be ‘a very good chance’ they could work something out.

These statements build on earlier reporting (already alerted) that an attack was planned and then delayed, but they add clear timing (attack scheduled ‘tomorrow,’ delay of 2–3 days) and direct attribution to Gulf mediation and ongoing negotiations.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

Key actors:
- United States: Donald Trump as Commander‑in‑Chief signaled that a U.S. strike package against Iran was planned and is now on hold. The Pentagon likely has operational plans ready for rapid execution within the 2–3 day window.
- Iran: No new direct statement is cited in these specific posts, but prior context notes Tehran saying it is prepared for any scenario amid a weakened truce.
- Gulf states: Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE are explicitly named as requesting the postponement and facilitating talks, indicating coordinated Gulf mediation aimed at avoiding an immediate regional war.
- Israel: Trump reports having updated Israel on the postponement, underscoring Jerusalem’s stake in the decision and suggesting close military‑intelligence coordination.

3. Immediate military and security implications

The risk of a U.S. kinetic strike on Iran in the next 24 hours has decreased, but not been removed. Postponement by 2–3 days implies:
- U.S. forces and regional partners likely remain at heightened readiness, with strike packages and defensive postures (air/missile defense, naval deployments) maintained.
- Iran’s military and allied militias will remain on alert; some may pre‑position assets or harden critical infrastructure, particularly nuclear, missile, and oil facilities.
- Gulf states and Israel will likely intensify intelligence collection and defensive preparations against potential Iranian retaliation in case talks fail and strikes proceed.
- Non‑state actors linked to Iran (e.g., regional militias, Yemeni or Iraqi proxies) may hold off major escalatory moves to avoid undermining negotiations but could resume activity if a deal falters.

4. Market and economic impact

Energy and commodities:
- Oil: The move from “strike tomorrow” to “postponed for talks” is modestly bearish for crude versus the immediate war-risk scenario, but the limited 2–3 day window preserves a significant geopolitical risk premium. Expect intraday volatility in Brent and WTI, with knee‑jerk selling on de‑escalation headlines, potentially reversed on any sign talks stall.
- Gold: Safe‑haven demand may ease slightly on reduced near‑term war probability but stay elevated due to residual risk and broader geopolitical uncertainty.
- Shipping: Any perceived risk to the Strait of Hormuz remains a key driver for tanker rates, insurance premia, and energy equities. The postponement buys time but does not eliminate the possibility of disruption.

Financial markets:
- Equities: Global indices, especially U.S. and European markets, may react positively to the lower immediate war risk. Defense stocks could see some giveback after any prior run‑up on strike expectations.
- FX and rates: Risk‑on currencies (AUD, EM FX) may firm slightly; USD and JPY safe‑haven flows could moderate. U.S. Treasuries might see some selling as tail‑risk is priced down.
- Regional assets: Gulf sovereign debt and equities may benefit from reduced immediate conflict risk, though spreads will stay headline‑sensitive.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Diplomatic track: Intensive shuttle diplomacy by Gulf states is likely, focused on nuclear and regional security guarantees that can satisfy minimum U.S. and Iranian requirements. Public statements from Riyadh, Doha, and Abu Dhabi should be monitored for concrete proposals.
- U.S. posture: The administration will likely leak or signal conditions for calling off the strike entirely, possibly including verifiable Iranian steps on nuclear enrichment, proxy activity, or inspections.
- Iranian response: Watch for calibrated messaging from Tehran—either openness to talks (likely framed as a victory for deterrence) or hardline rhetoric to shore up domestic legitimacy.
- Market behavior: Energy and risk assets will trade headline‑to‑headline. Any sign that talks are failing, or that a new strike window is being set, will likely trigger sharp moves in oil, gold, and safe‑haven flows.

Overall, this is a pivotal but fragile de‑escalation. The probability of an imminent U.S.–Iran military clash has diminished, yet remains live within a clearly defined 2–3 day horizon.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
De-escalation of immediate strike risk should ease near-term crude and gold risk premia, support high-beta EM and Gulf assets, and modestly strengthen risk-on FX versus safe havens. However, the explicit 2–3 day postponement window preserves significant headline risk and could keep volatility elevated in oil, defense names, and regional CDS.
