President Trump has urged Iran to free eight women facing execution as U.S. and Iranian delegations prepare for a critical round of ceasefire talks, tying the prisoners’ fate to a fragile, time-limited negotiating window.
President Trump publicly asked Iran to consider releasing eight women who are reportedly facing death sentences, coupling a humanitarian appeal with high-stakes diplomacy. Negotiating teams from the United States and Iran were set to meet on Tuesday for a final attempt to lock in a permanent ceasefire, with a tentative deal set to lapse Wednesday night after an extension granted by the president.
Trump indicated that releasing the women would be a positive opening gesture as talks get underway, signaling that human rights issues are on the table as part of larger security discussions. The request lands at a tense moment, when the window for agreement is narrow and both sides are under pressure to show progress quickly.
Trump told the regime that he would consider the release of the eight women “a great start to our negotiations.”
BREAKING: The Islamic Republic is preparing to hang eight women.
Not a word from the international community or so-called human rights organizations. pic.twitter.com/aBKxkjbdym
— Eyal Yakoby (@EYakoby) April 21, 2026
“To the Iranian leaders, who will soon be in negotiations with my representatives: I would greatly appreciate the release of these women. I am sure that they will respect the fact that you did so,” the president wrote in a post on Truth Social. “Please do them no harm! Would be a great start to our negotiations!!! Thank you for your attention to this matter. President DONALD J. TRUMP.”
Reports indicate the women were involved in anti-regime protests earlier this year, and their execution would be another example of Tehran’s crackdown on dissent. Those demonstrations sparked international outrage, and the fate of these detainees has become a focal point for critics of Iran’s human rights record.
So far there has been no public response from Iranian authorities to the president’s appeal, and it remains unclear if the regime will take the step of freeing the women. The uncertainty extends to timing as well; officials have not confirmed when any executions might occur, adding urgency to the diplomatic timeline.
The president’s move ties a moral demand to a strategic negotiation, pressing Tehran to demonstrate willingness to act on human rights as a sign of good faith. For Republicans and national security hawks, pairing tangible humanitarian concessions with security agreements makes political and diplomatic sense, because it tests whether Tehran is serious about de-escalation.
Critics of the administration will argue about tactics and motives, but the core issue is straightforward: lives are at risk and a diplomatic opening exists. If the release happens, it would give negotiators breathing room and a public relations victory that could help lock down broader terms of a ceasefire.
Meanwhile, the broader diplomatic picture is fragile; the extension that pushed the deadline to Wednesday night buys time but not certainty. With both sides poised to bargain and public attention fixed on the detained women, the coming days will show whether Tehran will respond with concrete action or continue to stall while negotiations hang in the balance.




