特朗普将与伊朗的停火无限期延长,直至“谈判结束”


2026-04-21T16:19:00-0400 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻

特朗普将与伊朗的停火无限期延长,直至“谈判结束”

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凯瑟琳·沃森
凯瑟琳·沃森 政治记者
凯瑟琳·沃森是哥伦比亚广播公司新闻数字版驻华盛顿特区的政治记者。
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凯瑟琳·沃森
更新时间:2026年4月21日 / 美国东部时间下午7:49 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻

华盛顿讯—— 特朗普总统周二宣布,将美伊两国战争中的停火期限延长至美伊谈判“结束”为止,尽管他此前曾表示不会延长停火截止日期。

总统表示,他应巴基斯坦的请求批准了停火延长,并指责伊朗“严重分裂”的政府导致了谈判拖延。他表示,他将给予伊朗官员更多时间“拿出统一的提案”。

“因此,我已指示我国军方继续实施封锁,在所有其他方面保持随时待命、有能力采取行动的状态,并将延长停火期限,直至伊朗提交其提案且谈判以任何方式结束,”总统于周二下午在Truth Social平台上发帖称。

伊朗尚未对总统的停火延长决定作出公开回应。

原定于周二晚间到期的为期两周的停火协议,特朗普近日曾表示将在周三晚间结束。特朗普此前曾表示,他不倾向于延长停火期限,停火结束后美国对伊朗的轰炸行动将恢复。

周二上午,当被美国全国广播公司财经频道(CNBC)问及如果谈判进展顺利是否会允许停火继续时,总统表示:“我不想这么做。我们没有那么多时间。”

“好吧,我预计会发动轰炸,因为我认为这是我们应该秉持的更好姿态,”他告诉CNBC。“但我们已经准备就绪。我的意思是,军方已经迫不及待了。”

美伊两国两周前达成停火协议,暂停敌对行动,为双方争取了更多谈判时间。

美伊代表在伊斯兰堡举行首次会议后,高层谈判陷入停滞,此前人们对进一步深入谈判抱有希望,这一结果打破了这种期待。首轮谈判结束后,特朗普指责伊朗拒绝就其核项目达成美国总统认为可接受的协议。

双方互相指责对方违反停火协议:伊朗封锁途经霍尔木兹海峡的船只,而美国则封锁伊朗港口。

周一,总统表示副总统J·D·万斯、美国特使史蒂夫·威科夫以及他的女婿贾里德·库什纳正在前往伊斯兰堡的途中,但事实并非如此。一名白宫官员称,美国高级代表团“计划近期前往伊斯兰堡”。但在特朗普周二宣布延长停火协议时,万斯仍在华盛顿。

近日,特朗普有关谈判状况的言论出现转变。周五,他称伊朗“同意了所有条款”,但伊朗方面的表态并非如此。伊朗外交部坚称不会向美国移交铀,尽管特朗普曾声称美国将“获取”伊朗的浓缩铀。

美国对伊朗的军事行动现已持续超过七周,而政府官员最初称这场行动将持续四至六周,行动始于2月底美国和以色列袭击伊朗目标之时。

By
Kathryn Watson
Kathryn Watson Politics Reporter
Kathryn Watson is a politics reporter for CBS News Digital, based in Washington, D.C.
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Kathryn Watson
Updated on: April 21, 2026 / 7:49 PM EDT / CBS News

Washington— President Trump is extending the ceasefire in the war with Iran until talks between the U.S. and Iran are “concluded,” he announced Tuesday, despite previously saying he wouldn’t extend the deadline.

The president said he is granting the ceasefire extension at Pakistan’s request, and blamed Iran’s “seriously fractured” government for the delay. He said he is giving Iranian officials more time to “come up with a unified proposal.”

“I have therefore directed our Military to continue the Blockade and, in all other respects, remain ready and able, and will therefore extend the Ceasefire until such time as their proposal is submitted, and discussions are concluded, one way or the other,” the president posted on Truth Social Tuesday afternoon.

Iran has not publicly reacted to the president’s extension.

The two-week ceasefire was originally set to expire Tuesday night, but Mr. Trump has said in recent days it would end Wednesday evening. Mr. Trump said previously that he wasn’t inclined to extend that deadline, and that the U.S.’s bombing campaign against Iran would resume upon the ceasefire’s conclusion.

Asked on CNBC Tuesday morning whether he would allow the ceasefire to continue if talks are going well, the president said, “I don’t want to do that. We don’t have that much time.”

“Well, I expect to be bombing, because I think that’s a better attitude to go in with,” he told CNBC. “But we’re ready to go. I mean, the military is raring to go.”

The U.S. and Iran agreed to a ceasefire two weeks ago, pausing hostilities and buying the two sides more time to negotiate.

Senior-level talks stalled after an initial meeting with U.S. and Iranian representatives in Islamabad, dashing hopes for further in-depth negotiations. After the first round of talks, Mr. Trump accused Iran of refusing to reach a deal on its nuclear program that the U.S. president views as acceptable.

Both sides have accused each other of violating the ceasefire, with Iran blocking ships from transiting the Strait of Hormuz while the U.S. blockades Iranian ports.

On Monday, the president said Vice President JD Vance, U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff and his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, were on their way to Islamabad, although that wasn’t the case. A White House official said a senior U.S. delegation “plans to travel to Islamabad soon.” But by the president’s announcement of a ceasefire extension Tuesday, Vance was still in Washington.

The president has shifted his messaging on the state of negotiations in recent days. On Friday, he said Iran has “agreed to everything,” something that didn’t bear out in Iran’s own messaging. The Iranian Foreign Ministry insisted uranium will not be transferred to the U.S., despite Mr. Trump’s claim that the U.S. would “take” the country’s enriched uranium.

The U.S. is now more than seven weeks into what administration officials initially said would be a four-to-six-week campaign in Iran, beginning when the U.S. and Israel struck Iranian targets in late February.

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