The mediators delivered a 45-day peace framework while Israel hit three Iranian airports, Trump threatened every power plant, and Iran vowed Hormuz would never reopen.
CBS, CNN and the NYT ran the binary deadline story — will Trump bomb or deal — missing that both were already happening.
X tracked the strike cadence in real time — wave 96 while diplomats studied paper, the contradiction nobody in Washington would name.
The ceasefire arrived on Monday. The strikes arrived on Monday. They landed on the same desk, in the same city, on the same day that Donald Trump expanded his threat from specific Iranian facilities to every power plant and bridge in the country.[1]
The 45-day framework — brokered by Egypt, Pakistan and Turkey, delivered to both Washington and Tehran — proposed an immediate ceasefire and reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, followed by 15 to 20 days of comprehensive settlement negotiations. It was the first concrete multi-party peace document of the war.[9]
It was also the most ignored.
Overnight, the Israeli military struck three airports across Iran. Iranian media reported hits on Khoy and Urmia in West Azerbaijan Province. The IDF confirmed a "broad wave of strikes toward infrastructure of the Iranian terror regime in Tehran and Isfahan," targeting Iranian Air Force and IRGC Air Force assets at Bahram and Mehrabad air bases. The strikes were not aimed at military positions near the front. They were aimed at Iran's air capabilities — the country's ability to defend its own sky.[11]
By morning, the IDF had officially confirmed what X had been tracking since Sunday night: Maj. Gen. Majid Khademi, the IRGC's intelligence chief, was dead. Israel confirmed the strike that killed him and vowed to target Iranian leaders "one by one." The language was deliberate — not "as necessary," not "if warranted." One by one.[8]
Four people died in Haifa when an Iranian missile struck a residential building. Hezbollah reported fresh strikes on Israeli towns. Warning sirens sounded in Bahrain, 200 kilometers from the Iranian coast. The war was not winding down. It was widening.[4]
Trump stood at a podium and said Iran could be "taken out in one night." He said the United States had "a plan for every bridge and every power plant." He said a deal was "possible." All three statements came from the same mouth, in the same breath, on the same day that the ceasefire proposal sat unread in Tehran.[2]
The Proposal Nobody Will Claim
The framework has no author. Egypt, Pakistan and Turkey jointly delivered it — a three-mediator structure designed so that no single country could be blamed if it failed and no single country could claim credit if it succeeded. That is the language of diplomats who expect failure.[10]
Phase 1 is immediate: ceasefire and Hormuz reopening. Phase 2 is 15 to 20 days for a comprehensive settlement. The structure is familiar — it mirrors the format that produced the 2015 nuclear deal, with its phased approach and verification mechanisms. But the context is not 2015. In 2015, both sides wanted a deal. Today, both sides are bombing.
Iran's response was definitive. "Negotiation can in no way be compatible with ultimatums," the foreign ministry said. The IRGC Navy vowed that Hormuz "will never return to its former state." These are not the words of a country preparing to negotiate. They are the words of a country preparing for escalation.[3]
Yet Iranian officials also said they were "studying" the proposal. The word matters. Studying is not rejecting. Studying is the diplomatic equivalent of leaving the door ajar while standing in the doorway.
Trump has not signed off. His Tuesday 8pm ET deadline stands — "Power Plant Day and Bridge Day," he called it on social media, in a formulation that mixed policy with vulgarity. The deadline was extended from Monday to Tuesday, giving Iran an extra 24 hours to decide whether to accept a framework that it has already publicly rejected.[5]
The Strike Cadence
While diplomats studied paper, the strike campaign continued. Wave 96, X users counted — the 96th coordinated strike package since the war began on February 28. The numbering is unofficial but consistent, tracked by open-source analysts who monitor flight patterns, explosion reports, and Iranian civil defense alerts.[7]
The airport strikes represent a shift in targeting. Previous waves focused on military installations, IRGC facilities, and nuclear-adjacent infrastructure. Hitting airports — civilian-military dual-use facilities — signals an intent to degrade Iran's air force on the ground. It is the same playbook the US used against Iraq in 1991 and against Serbia in 1999: destroy the air force before it can fly.[12]
The damage assessment is incomplete. Iranian state media acknowledged "material damage" at Mehrabad but claimed all attacks were "repelled." Satellite imagery will tell a different story, but that data is not yet public.[6]
What is public is the trajectory. Bushehr was hit at 75 meters from the reactor core — down from 350 meters on March 18. The Mahshahr petrochemical complex was destroyed, taking out 50 percent of Iran's production capacity. Khademi was killed. And now the airports. Each strike is closer to something that matters more.
The Contradiction
The ceasefire proposal and the strike campaign are not competing narratives. They are the same narrative, told in two languages. The US is bombing harder to negotiate from strength. Iran is negotiating to buy time while its military rebuilds. Neither side believes the other is sincere. Both sides are right.
This is not the first time a ceasefire has arrived on the same day as an escalation. It is, however, the first time the escalation has been so public, so deliberate, and so clearly designed to undermine the very diplomacy it claims to support.
Trump's Tuesday deadline is not a deadline. It is a threat wrapped in a timeline. Iran's rejection of ultimatums is not a negotiating position. It is a refusal to be told when to surrender. The ceasefire proposal sits between them, a document that both sides can point to as evidence of their good faith while neither side changes its behavior.
The war is still expanding. The ceasefire is still on the table. Both facts are true. Neither fact changes the other.
-- YOSEF STERN, Jerusalem