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German Chancellor 'grateful' Trump delaying Iran power plant strikes

AFP
AFP - news@thelocal.de
German Chancellor 'grateful' Trump delaying Iran power plant strikes
US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters before boarding Air Force One at Palm Beach International Airport in Florida, on March 23, 2026. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP)

Germany's Chancellor has said he's glad Trump is postponing plans to strike power plants in Iran.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said Monday he was "grateful" to US President Donald Trump for delaying previously threatened strikes on Iranian power plants.

"I expressed my concerns to him regarding the announced attacks on the power plants in Iran," Merz told a Berlin press conference about their Sunday phone call.

"I am grateful that he said today he is postponing them for another five days."

The US president abruptly said in a post on his Truth Social platform that he was ordering a halt to strikes on Iran's energy infrastructure, claiming the United States had held "very good" talks with Tehran.

Iranian media has denied that any negotiations took place.

Merz, however, welcomed that Trump "is now opening the possibility for immediate and direct contact with the Iranian leadership".

The chancellor said he had offered Trump Berlin's diplomatic assistance to mediate the conflict, which has seen global energy prices rise sharply and triggered concerns of a severe economic fallout.

READ ALSO: Why fuel prices are rising faster in Germany than in other European countries

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"We have good contacts throughout the region," Merz said.

"We are not yet at the point where we are discussing joint measures, but I offered to work together and do everything we can to achieve a ceasefire in the region as quickly as possible."

Merz has repeatedly condemned Iran's leadership and voiced initial support for the US-Israeli war, but has since expressed growing concern about the costs of the conflict.

READ ALSO: Germany 'would have advised against' US-Israel war on Iran

Germany, along with other European NATO members, has also repeatedly stressed that they would not become directly involved in the conflict.

That has prompted Trump, who has variously demanded NATO help in opening the Strait of Hormuz to ship traffic, to slam those allies as "cowards".

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