President Trump revealed on Saturday that a preliminary accord with Iran is approaching completion, establishing groundwork for comprehensive peace negotiations. The proposed agreement includes reopening the Strait of Hormuz, the critical maritime corridor that facilitates approximately one-fifth of global petroleum transportation.
The President disclosed the development via Truth Social, indicating that the framework had been “substantially completed” through discussions involving the United States, Iran, and multiple intermediary nations. He stated that complete details would be made public in the near future.
The strategic waterway has remained inaccessible since Iran imposed a closure following combined U.S.-Israeli military operations that resulted in the death of Iran’s long-standing leader Ali Khamenei during late February. This blockade has significantly impacted international petroleum markets and intensified wider economic challenges.
Brent crude contracts concluded Friday’s trading session slightly above $100 per barrel, while the American WTI benchmark finished the week exceeding $96. Oil prices had already begun retreating Thursday when preliminary indications of a possible ceasefire arrangement emerged in media reports.
On Saturday, Trump conducted conversations with heads of state from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, and Bahrain. These discussions were followed by a call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has traditionally resisted diplomatic overtures toward Iran.
Esmail Baghaei, spokesperson for Iran’s foreign ministry, verified that both nations were approaching the “concluding phase” of developing a memorandum of understanding. He characterized the 30-60 day timeframe for reaching a comprehensive agreement as achievable.
The proposed framework outlines that Iran would provisionally reopen the Strait of Hormuz and eliminate passage fees during the negotiation period. Reciprocally, Washington would terminate its maritime blockade affecting Iranian harbors. Tehran is additionally pursuing rapid release of roughly $100 billion in frozen financial assets currently held internationally under American sanctions.
Pakistan, along with multiple Arab states, has advocated for extending the existing ceasefire by six weeks to provide additional time for diplomatic efforts.
The preliminary framework leaves unaddressed the fundamental disagreement concerning Iran’s nuclear capabilities. The United States seeks a comprehensive agreement incorporating a two-decade moratorium on Iranian nuclear operations and Tehran’s commitment to transfer its inventory of highly enriched uranium to American custody.
Iran has categorically refused both demands. Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei declared publicly this week that no enriched uranium would be permitted to leave Iranian territory. Officials from Tehran have indicated that nuclear matters should be deliberated at a subsequent stage, concurrent with comprehensive sanctions removal.
Additional unresolved matters encompass Iran’s ballistic missile capabilities and its assistance to regional armed factions — both representing critical concerns for Israel and Washington’s Gulf allies.
Iran’s semiofficial Fars News agency disputed Trump’s characterization, asserting that any agreement would preserve Iran’s authority over transit routes, scheduling, and passage authorization through the Strait of Hormuz.
Hostilities have not formally concluded. American military personnel and equipment remain deployed in Israel, and armed conflict could restart should diplomatic efforts fail.
Certain Republican senators, including Lindsey Graham, have openly encouraged Trump to recommence military operations rather than offer diplomatic compromises.
This framework represents the most recent chapter in a protracted series of exchanges between Washington and Tehran that has alternated between promising diplomatic breakthroughs and threats of renewed military engagement.
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