Level 1 - Absolute Beginner
On June 12, 2026, the leader of the United States said something very important. President Trump said he would not attack Iran. He canceled the military strike at the last minute.
Trump wants peace. He said the two countries are very close to a deal. He thinks the deal can be signed in a few days, maybe in Europe.
When people heard the news, they felt happy and hopeful. Stock prices went up. Oil became cheaper. Many people hope the long war will end very soon.
- cancel
- to stop something that was planned from happening
- peace
- when two sides stop fighting and agree to live without war
- deal
- an agreement between two sides that both accept
- strike
- a military attack on a target
- sign
- to write your name on a document to make it official
- oil
- a liquid fuel used in cars, ships, and industry
- war
- a violent conflict fought between countries
- leader
- the person who is in charge of a country or group
Level 2 - Elementary
On June 12, 2026, President Trump made a dramatic announcement. He said he had canceled a planned military strike against Iran, writing on social media that talks had reached the highest levels of the Iranian government. Trump added that he expected a peace agreement to be finalized within the next few days.
Trump suggested the official signing ceremony might take place in Europe, possibly within a week. When a reporter asked about Iran's nuclear program, Trump said there was a conceptual agreement -- meaning both sides had agreed in general, but the details were not yet fully written down.
Global markets reacted positively to the news. Oil prices fell to below $89.50 per barrel, as traders hoped the Strait of Hormuz waterway would soon reopen fully to shipping. Stock markets in the United States rose sharply. However, Iran's foreign ministry later said a deal had not yet been officially concluded, reminding everyone that the path to peace was still not completely clear.
- announcement
- an official public statement of important news
- conceptual
- agreed in general terms or in principle, without all the details finalized
- finalize
- to reach a complete and official agreement on all the remaining points
- signing ceremony
- a formal event at which an important official document is signed
- nuclear program
- a country's plan to develop nuclear energy or nuclear weapons
- Strait of Hormuz
- a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman that is crucial for the world's oil trade
- concluded
- officially completed or brought to a final end
- market
- a system where goods or financial products are bought and sold
Level 3 - Intermediate
In a dramatic reversal on June 12, 2026, President Trump announced he had called off a package of military strikes against Iran, stating on Truth Social that negotiations had escalated to the highest levels of the Iranian government. Trump wrote that, at the request of Gulf allies, he had postponed the operation and that a formal agreement was within days of being finalized, hinting that a signing ceremony could take place in Europe.
The announcement came after months of an on-and-off conflict between the United States and Iran that had throttled oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz and pushed global energy prices to multi-year highs. Trump suggested the final agreement would address both the nuclear issue and the naval blockade, representing a comprehensive settlement to a conflict that had severely disrupted the global economy.
Global financial markets responded with significant optimism. Brent crude futures fell toward $89 per barrel as traders priced in a probable reopening of the strait. U.S. and European equity indices rose between 1.5 and 2.5 percent, while the dollar weakened against major currencies. However, Iran's foreign ministry cautioned that a deal had not yet been formally concluded, introducing uncertainty about whether Trump's confident statements accurately reflected the state of negotiations.
- reversal
- a change to the opposite direction or position from a previous decision
- throttle
- to severely restrict or reduce the flow of something, such as trade or oil
- blockade
- the use of military force to prevent goods or ships from entering or leaving an area
- equity indices
- measures of stock market performance calculated across many companies
- futures
- contracts to buy or sell a commodity at an agreed price on a future date
- comprehensive
- covering all or nearly all aspects of a complex situation
- foreign ministry
- the government department responsible for a country's international relations and diplomacy
- uncertainty
- a state of not knowing what will happen or whether something is true
Level 4 - Advanced
President Trump's June 12, 2026 announcement that he had indefinitely postponed a package of military strikes against Iranian targets marked the most consequential diplomatic development of the eleven-week U.S.-Iran war, though the path from cancellation to a signed agreement remained strewn with ambiguities. Writing on Truth Social, Trump asserted that discussions had been brought to the highest level of Iranian leadership and that a formal accord was imminent, floating the possibility of a European signing ceremony within days -- language conveying bold confidence while sidestepping the question of verified and binding commitments.
The prospective deal, as described by senior U.S. officials, would address the two pillars of the conflict: Iran's nuclear enrichment activities and the de facto blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, through which approximately twenty percent of the world's seaborne oil transits. Preliminary reporting indicated that Tehran had agreed in principle to a monitored pause on enrichment above twenty percent in exchange for a phased lifting of OFAC secondary sanctions, with the naval standoff ending as an early-implementation confidence measure. Whether Iran's Supreme National Security Council had formally ratified these terms remained opaque; the foreign ministry's statement that a deal had not been finalized carried the hallmark ambiguity of Iranian institutional-factional signaling rather than a clear repudiation.
The announcement produced swift and tangible market effects. Brent crude futures eased toward $89 per barrel as algorithmic trading desks recalibrated strait-closure risk premiums. U.S. equity indices advanced sharply -- the S&P 500 rose 1.75 percent and the Nasdaq added 2.54 percent -- while the dollar weakened against the euro, yen, and sterling as safe-haven inflows reversed. Lloyd's war-risk premiums for very-large crude carriers transiting the Hormuz corridor eased toward 0.55 percent of hull value, signaling that the re-insurance market was partially discounting the prospect of imminent normalization even before a formal agreement had been announced.
- consequential
- having important, wide-reaching effects on events or outcomes
- ambiguity
- a situation or statement that can be interpreted in more than one way, creating uncertainty
- enrichment
- the process of increasing the concentration of a nuclear isotope, used to produce reactor fuel or weapons-grade material
- phased
- carried out gradually in a series of planned stages rather than all at once
- opaque
- difficult to understand or see through; lacking transparency about true intentions or facts
- repudiation
- a formal rejection or disavowal of an agreement, claim, or obligation
- algorithmic trading
- the use of computer programs to execute financial trades automatically based on preset rules