* The U.S. agrees to release $25 billion of Iran’s frozen assets, including via direct cash transfers, cooperation among regional countries, and financial credit lines.
* Washington, in coordination with its regional allies, would prepare a reconstruction and development plan for Iran, to be negotiated and agreed with Tehran within 60 days.
What the US gets:
* Tehran agrees that it will neither produce nor acquire nuclear weapons.
* Pending a final agreement, Iran would maintain the current status of its nuclear programme, refraining from further uranium enrichment and expansion of nuclear facilities.
* The United States agrees to allow Iran to dilute its stockpile of highly enriched uranium on Iranian soil under a future comprehensive agreement.
* Iran’s nuclear programme, uranium enrichment activities and mechanisms for handling its stockpile of highly enriched uranium would be negotiated within 60 days of the memorandum and addressed in a final agreement.
bhouston 3 hours ago [-]
This is nothing significantly different from the Obama P5+1:
> Tehran agrees that it will neither produce nor acquire nuclear weapons.
Of course they do. They have always said they don’t want nuclear weapons while pursuing them relentlessly.
> Iran’s nuclear programme, uranium enrichment activities and mechanisms for handling its stockpile of highly enriched uranium would be negotiated within 60 days of the memorandum and addressed in a final agreement.
If that is still to be discussed, then what have they been discussing so far? That has always been the main issue.
spwa4 3 hours ago [-]
> If that is still to be discussed, then what have they been discussing so far? That has always been the main issue.
If the agreement means Iran seriously agrees to dilute (which boils down to destroying) it's nuclear stockpile, with UN or US or ... witnesses, that's pretty damn new.
petilon 3 hours ago [-]
Iran hasn't agreed to that. United States agrees to allow Iran to dilute its stockpile of highly enriched uranium on Iranian soil under a future comprehensive agreement.
spwa4 3 hours ago [-]
Jep, it's not exactly a clear agreement. I agree.
analognoise 2 hours ago [-]
Our own intelligence agencies said they were not making nuclear weapons.
Trump released Iran's frozen assets, in return for them opening the straight and thereby dropping oil prices before the midterm elections.
Reminder, the reason Trump hated the Obama deal was because he construed it as paying Iran not to develop nuclear weapons. Obama was paying Iran with the money from Iran's frozen assets. Trump's deal gives them that money, and has no nuclear agreement.
cosmicgadget 1 hours ago [-]
He didn't hate the Obama deal, he hated Obama therefore everything he does has to be criticized and torn down. If that deal had Iran paying the US, Trump would have said the color of the money was no good. And his supporters would eat it up.
petilon 3 hours ago [-]
Rising inflation at home forced Trump's hand.
HeavyStorm 2 hours ago [-]
No, invading Iran without a proper plan or goal forced his hand. This was a strategic mistake from Day 1.
comrade1234 3 hours ago [-]
Also, the u.s. makes Israel stop destroying Lebanon. Trump is already pressing Israel on this. Iran will come across as Lebanon's saviors.
smt88 3 hours ago [-]
Trump hasn’t (so far) demonstrated the ability to stop Israel from bombing and invading Lebanon, so I’m not sure what we can hope will change before Netanyahu leaves office.
2 hours ago [-]
wolvoleo 3 hours ago [-]
So basically the Obama agreement that Trump trashed. Only now people had to die to get to this point.
kennywinker 3 hours ago [-]
…plus iran gets $300bn in reconstruction money
bilalq 3 hours ago [-]
This completely ignores the shareholder value to the military industrial complex and the truth machine value of prediction markets from the not-insider traders.
tejohnso 2 hours ago [-]
Also...
The US' limitations in its ability to project power have been exposed. Having American bases in the middle east has been shown to be nothing but a liability for host countries. And Iran has proven that it can withstand anything the US is willing to throw at it, and hit back hard, over a relatively prolonged period.
And Iran has shown that its constitution is strong and power succession is effective even after a massive decapitation strike. There was seemingly zero turmoil, control appears to have been maintained without issue.
And Iran's non nuclear option of controlling the strait has been tested andd shown to be highly effective.
And Iran has gained significant operational experience with its massive stores of drones and missles.
And the US has lost multiple billion dollar intelligence installations in the region.
And Americans have been made aware of the Israel lobby like never before, and Trump is in a very difficult position heading into the midterms.
mandeepj 48 minutes ago [-]
> And Iran has proven that it can withstand anything the US is willing to throw at it
Also, the idiot in the WH, single handedly turned Iran's many anti-regime citizens to pro-regime and patriotic.
bhouston 3 hours ago [-]
From who? Trump can not even get the $10B he said would go to Gaza?
which is of course the real kicker, The Gulf states are going to pay for the adventure and deal with an emboldened Iran and their damaged economies and infrastructure. Having US bases in the region has turned from a security guarantee into a disaster, the implications of this are pretty obvious.
kennywinker 3 hours ago [-]
“US and allies” apparently
glimshe 3 hours ago [-]
Obama's agreement didn't stop enrichment, leading to the current crisis.
wolvoleo 3 hours ago [-]
It did to weapons grade. It only permitted enrichment for energy purposes. And was validated by inspections.
The current crisis is entirely because Trump trashed that agreement in the first place.
hagbard_c 3 hours ago [-]
...and then you woke up and realised that Iran never allowed those inspectors to inspect the actually important facilities and started removing inspectors from the country in 2023 under Biden.
Biden was elected _after_ Trump broke the deal so it's unclear why you think that tells us anything about what would have happened had the United States honored the treaty.
defrost 2 hours ago [-]
Chronologically wrong.
During the time of JCPOA (original, between Iran and the P5+1) inspectors had access to where they wanted to go (sometimes with friction, sure) and were able to place tamper resistant / tamper revealing instrumentation, air filters, and spectrometers - effectively creating a data record that could place a stochastic cap on {enrichment level, volume}.
After Trump ripped up that agreement during his first term, withdrawing from the pact in 2018, that was no longer the case - leading to your linked 2023 statement.
tristanj 3 hours ago [-]
The crisis exists because Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons. That's the root issue.
JCPOA was never a permanent solution. Under JCPOA, Iran agreed to temporarily cap enrichment for 15 years until 2030. After which, Iran could enrich freely.
JCPOA had no extension framework, the deal could not be extended without being renegotiated. And Iranian officials refused to agree to permanent enrichment caps, they said the 15-year sunset on enrichment was a non-negotiable.
blactuary 2 hours ago [-]
The experience of the last 10 years with these dingbats in charge is an incentive for every country to pursue their own nukes
throaway23663 2 hours ago [-]
So you're saying all of this shit is a because we could not renegotiate a deal... which is to end in 2030? As if there was no more time to wait?
hypeatei 2 hours ago [-]
> The crisis exists because Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons
According to whom? I know there's one country who says Iran is two weeks away from nuclear weapons, but who else?
Former Iranian Majles member Ali Motahari said in an April 24, 2022 interview on ISCA News (Iran) that when Iran began developing its nuclear program, the goal was to build a nuclear bomb. He said that there is no need to beat around the bush, and that the bomb would have been used as a "means of intimidation" in accordance with a Quranic verse about striking "fear in the hearts of the enemies of Allah."
"When we began our nuclear activity, our goal was indeed to build a bomb,” former Iranian politician Ali Motahari told ISCA News. “There is no need to beat around the bush,” he said.
When asked if saying this publicly will negatively affect the ongoing JCPOA negotiations, Motahari answered: "Nobody notices what I am saying."
He wasn't a member at the time of those statements nor did he have any involvement in their nuclear program. That's misleading to say the least.
Ali Motahari—former member of Iran’s Parliament—clarified that the interview dates back to May 2022, when he neither held a parliamentary seat nor any official role in nuclear affairs.[0]
So besides a single guy in Iran, are there official delegations that have concluded Iran was developing nuclear weapons? The US has had two National Intelligence Estimates, which consists of all 18 agencies in the intelligence community, conclude that they were not developing nukes.
You're misreading your own sources. The 2007 NIE and Gabbard's 2025 testimony both describe a nuclear weapons program that Iran "suspended in 2003". They confirm a nuclear weapons program existed, the opposite of what you're claiming.
And you want an official source: the IAEA concluded in May 2025 that Iran ran an "undeclared structured nuclear program" until the early 2000s using undeclared material. Then it found Iran in formal non-compliance in June of last year.
"Not building a warhead today" and "never pursued weapons" are different claims, and you swapped one for the other.
I never swapped claims. We're talking about nuclear weapons and why the US started a war with Iran this year due to this supposed "crisis" (in your words) but there's no evidence that a threat is imminent. The NIEs were just one data point against your claim; the burden is still on you to show who else agrees with the assesment that this is a crisis.
> IAEA concluded in May 2025 that Iran ran an "undeclared structured nuclear program" until the early 2000s
"nuclear program" is not the same as a weapons program and the IAEA sounding alarm bells over policy violations is not a conclusion that Iran is/was on a nuclear warpath.
defrost 1 hours ago [-]
For unrelated reasons I personally don't believe Iran was ever pursuing a nuclear weapon, just edging enrichment for leverage.
That said, this:
The US has had two National Intelligence Estimates, which consists of all 18 agencies in the intelligence community, conclude that they were not developing nukes.
has little weight given these were / are the same US intell agencies that were blindsided and caught pants down unaware and in the dark about the 1998 India / Pakistan nuclear test exchange.
throaway23663 2 hours ago [-]
> MEMRI was co-founded by Israeli ex-intelligence officer Yigal Carmon and Israeli-American political scientist Meyrav Wurmser in 1998.
Well that's convenient, isn't it.
tristanj 2 hours ago [-]
You're trying hard to discredit this, but that fails here. The interview in question was conduced by ISCA News, an Iranian state-run media agency.
comrade1234 3 hours ago [-]
It did though? Trump pulled out of the deal in his first term and then Iran enriched from 3%.
tristanj 3 hours ago [-]
JCPOA only had temporary enrichment limits, which would end in 2030, after which Iran could enrich freely. It did not permanently stop enrichment.
If JCPOA was followed by both Iran and the US to the letter, we would face a similar crisis to the one seen today, except around 2031-2035.
defrost 2 hours ago [-]
Unless agreements are renegotiated and extended, of course.
What matters is ongoing engagement and monitoring, it's a far more tractable position than standoffs with zero knowledge or interaction.
tristanj 2 hours ago [-]
The core reason those sunset dates exist is because Iranian officials stated that a sunset on enrichment limits was a non-negotiable. They would not sign a deal without them.
Claiming "agreements are renegotiated and extended" is hypothetical. What incentive does Iran have to agree to enrichment caps post-2030? Why would Iran give up its strongest negotiating card, its nuclear program?
cosmicgadget 1 hours ago [-]
For the same reasons it temporarily gave it up before?
tristanj 1 hours ago [-]
Under JCPOA, Iran capped its nuclear program for 15 years in exchange for:
* Global sanctions relief
* $100-150 billion in frozen assets
* Access to the global oil market
Iran in 2030 under JCPOA already has access to all three. The US already played its best cards to get Iran to agree to JCPOA. The US has little new to offer, other than resumed sanctions.
no-name-here 29 minutes ago [-]
Under a JCPOA extension, why would items like access to the global oil markets (in addition to sanctions) not be part of the negotiations?
And with JCPOA and its possible continuation, that was a joint agreement among a number of countries - in the current situation, it’s just the U.S. trying to impose its will on other countries to go along with any carrots/sticks.
cosmicgadget 30 minutes ago [-]
Well yes, exactly. Would sanctions not be an incentive in 2030?
insane_dreamer 2 hours ago [-]
So basically, what we had before Trump started this stupid war at Bibi's behest.
mcphage 21 minutes ago [-]
Well, except for the tens of billions we spent, and the $324 billion we’re giving Iran, and also our ability to exert any force on the world.
3 hours ago [-]
smt88 3 hours ago [-]
Iran didn’t insist on enrichment for weapons. They had verifiably stopped and then Trump threw away the deal where they agreed to stop. This is 100% Trump’s fault, from start to finish.
mostafah 3 hours ago [-]
I’m an Iranian in my 40s, and the regime and Western countries have been negotiating for most of my life. I remember being in high school when the first nuclear talks began, and ever since, it has been a never-ending series of talks, understandings, and plans without any real conclusion. I remember there were cases when they talked for weeks, and their main achievement was agreement on the time and place of the next negotiations. Today’s “deal” is no different. No party is releasing an official text; apparently, it’s not a real deal but a memorandum of understanding outlining a plan for further talks over the next 60 days. Another 60 days on top of the last two decades.
And all of these have only bought time and money for the regime to continue its nuclear ambitions, terrorism plans, and oppress the people of Iran, including almost daily executions of innocent protestors during the last few months as these negotiations went on.
The truth is, it won’t be possible to solve this issue with this approach. You can’t get a snake to sign a document to agree not to be poisonous anymore.
comrade1234 3 hours ago [-]
The original Obama deal kept Iran isolated and their nuclear stockpile limited. It didn't do anything for the Iranian people and that's tragic but until trump it wasn't the west's problem. The decades of negotiations was to everyone's benefit (except the Iranian people)
Now it is the wests problem (with the strait) but even now no one is going to send an army to Iran.
I know my views are probably overly simplistic.
khuey 3 hours ago [-]
I would bet considerable sums of money that this deal is also not going to do anything for the Iranian people.
sanid 3 hours ago [-]
It actually does, how about not dying from US/Israeli bombs? People tend to forget there is a human cost to this and not only oil and money involved. There are 3.5k people dead in Iran many more injured. The US killed indian sailors in the last couple of days, guess the remaining ones will be happy to not live with this danger.
khuey 36 minutes ago [-]
That's just restoring the status quo ante.
foogazi 54 minutes ago [-]
They were not dying from those bombs before the war
woodruffw 3 hours ago [-]
Are the terms of the deal public yet? If they're essentially a return to the status quo ante bellum, that would be a pretty embarrassing conclusion for the US (and would presumably further harden any belief within Iran that the only permanent regime-preserving solution involves accelerating the process of obtaining nuclear weapons).
compass_copium 3 hours ago [-]
From Al Jazeera:
>According to remarks carried by the Tasnim news agency, Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi said negotiations for a final deal will be held during a 60-day period, after verifying that the US implemented its commitments under the deal, including ending hostilities, lifting the blockade, and releasing frozen assets.
So, it's an even worse position for the US than before launching the war.
theturtletalks 3 hours ago [-]
Didn’t Iran consider their previous US negotiations a sham? Why would they believe them this time? Feels like the US wants to approach them with these deals, reneg, and once Iran is like we don’t want anymore deals, then the US can point to them and be like, see they don’t want peace.
ndiddy 2 hours ago [-]
For one thing, the US has agreed to give Iran $12 billion of their frozen assets before negotiations start, and another $12 billion during the 60 day negotiation period. When you repeatedly bomb the other side while prior negotiations were ongoing, before having to conclude that a negotiated settlement is the only way out of this, you have to make big concessions to even get the other side to the negotiating table.
alphabeta3r56 3 hours ago [-]
They were working for that agreement. trump canceled it, not they.
recroad 3 hours ago [-]
Iran was fully abiding by the JCPOA (Obama Iran deal) until Trump pulled out in his first term. Trump hates Obama so that was entirely out of spite.
What is surprising is how co-opted the Biden admin was by Israel, that they didn't even bother to even consider reentering it despite it being a Democratic party "win" when it was first announced.
No, they tried to negotiate a new deal, not go back to the one they had agreed to. Why would Iran trust any new negotiations?
Iran was naive enough to trust the US twice in the last year and HAD THEIR NEGOTIATING TEAM BOMBED! I'm shocked they even trust the US to hold up to the deal they signed today. I'm guessing US concessions on frozen assets was just too much to pass up.
alphabeta3r56 3 hours ago [-]
Why would Iran take that at that point? There's no trust.
mupuff1234 3 hours ago [-]
I didn't say they would, just refuting the claim that:
> What is surprising is how co-opted the Biden admin was by Israel, that they didn't even bother to even consider reentering it
bhouston 3 hours ago [-]
> So, it's an even worse position for the US than before launching the war.
True but continuing the war is worse for Trump. There was no real way to win.
compass_copium 3 hours ago [-]
Yes, the war was an obvious strategic blunder and (more importantly) an immoral and unjust invasion that should never have happened.
3 hours ago [-]
thrwaway55 3 hours ago [-]
There is no way Iran didn't gain on this, US would be lucky to hit status quo. The clown in chief is a moron and they know it and will exploit it.
beefmumbai 3 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
appplication 3 hours ago [-]
I think if we’re honest, the most likely outcome under Kamela would be that the US would not have attacked Iran, so there would be nothing to negotiate. It’s possible Israel may have done so anyway without US support.
thrwaway55 3 hours ago [-]
Buttery Males...I'm heard excuses for this guy for the epsteinth time that I struggle to think of anyone worse
dofm 3 hours ago [-]
Depends who you ask, I think.
It looks like it is more an MoU than a deal, and I think that allows Trump the cover to drip feed out how humiliating it is, because this isn't the kind of band-aid you rip off all at once.
If I were a betting man I would bet that between now and Friday there will be too much news coverage of just how humiliating this is for the USA, how bad a deal it is, and how much of failure it is, and Trump himself will pull out of the deal. This has, allegedly, happened at least once.
But Iran now seem to be a bit better schooled in how to actually get him to agree, so perhaps they will be persuaded to smile a shit-eating grin while he takes a victory lap, and simply keep the most humiliating details of it under wraps until he signs.
How long it is before Trump claims to renegotiate it, who knows. Just the other day Trump said he might not renew USMCA — his own prior great achievement of loudly renegotiating NAFTA to be not significantly worse.
no-name-here 20 minutes ago [-]
I can see the logic in what you’re saying, but Iran state media is reporting the deal includes “The US and its allies delivering reconstruction plans for Iran worth at least $300bn” (in addition to the $25B) but I don’t understand their use of the word “plan”? https://www.bbc.com/news/live/cj0grpyg4v1t?post=asset%3A1793...
epolanski 3 hours ago [-]
The conclusion has long been embarassing unless we live under a rock.
The US president has been played like a fool by the Israelis and Iran has inflicted a humiliating defeat to the US and its allies by leveraging cheap asymmetric warfare.
woodruffw 3 hours ago [-]
I think this war's first phase was clearly in Israel's favor, insofar as Israel's strategic goal is neutralizing Iran as a peer adversary. But the latter phases have not really gone how they (= Netanyahu) want/s; the ideal end state for Israel is an enormous civilian infrastructure cost to Iran that would subtract from military budgeting, but that isn't what the deal suggests.
(Intentionally targeting civilian infrastructure is, of course, a war crime.)
netsharc 3 hours ago [-]
Israel seems to have also lost out because any further war crimes they commit will get Trump angry, he's desperate to keep Iran from returning fire and further wrecking his midterms.
But heck, if I were Iran I'd be wary after November. With Russia-style election rigging and spineless congress, Trump-Hegseth might resume the war crimes...
2 hours ago [-]
dools 3 hours ago [-]
The commencement, duration and conclusion are all embarrassing for the US because the entire country is run by b list right wing media bros
beefmumbai 3 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
gyanchawdhary 3 hours ago [-]
DoW under Trump has basically disfigured Iran militarily and at this point their leadership will have to be outright mad and suicidal or both to pursue a nuclear weapon ..
foogazi 57 minutes ago [-]
Why is Iran getting any money out of this ?
How do they still have any cards ?
cosmicgadget 1 hours ago [-]
Maybe in the post-Putin power vacuum they'll have another option.
jeffbee 3 hours ago [-]
It's much worse than that. This gives Iran de jure control of traffic in the strait.
8note 3 hours ago [-]
iran has defacto control over traffic in the strait. what changes?
dofm 3 hours ago [-]
A toll booth.
There have been persistent rumours that Iran will be allowed to charge new "environmental fees" for access, "to protect the ecosystem of the Strait" or somesuch.
(Secretary of War and former Fox News weekend anchor Pete Hegseth was on the news just this evening saying that the USA has been in control of the Strait the whole time, so I think the USA is arguing against your (correct) characterisation of the situation.)
toomuchtodo 3 hours ago [-]
“Art of the deal.” Thousands of deaths and tens to hundreds of billions of dollars borrowed and spent to be in a worse position than before this started.
Iranians have said they cannot charge a "toll" according to international law, but they can charge a "fee". Charging a fee for maintanance, environment or security is fine, so it will be just a different branding to the "toll". Personally I think they should charge an environmental fee with the amount of traffic going through there.
If I understand 'jeffbee correctly, I think they mean that Iran now has practical evidence that it can gum up the strait and therefore extract political concessions from it, even if they don't literally result in tolling.
(In other words, every barrel of oil that passes through the straight will now have an $X risk surcharge on it, whether or not that surcharge ends up in Iran's coffers.)
dofm 3 hours ago [-]
The persistent rumour about this deal process is that Iran will charge "environmental fees".
jeffbee 2 hours ago [-]
Trump also said he would refill the Strategic Petroleum Reserve "right to the top" in 6 weeks and, instead, emptied it to its lowest level ever. He also said foreign investment in the United States would rise to 22 trillion dollars, but instead total foreign investment weakened to below $300 billion in 2025. Oh, and he also said tariffs were cutting the deficit by 25%, while he instead managed the deficit to a slightly higher level, even before counting the Iran War.
Amezarak 3 hours ago [-]
Iran had already passed the IAEA red-line of enriching uranium to 60%. They had already accomplished virtually all the hard parts of building a bomb.
> The most alarming aspect of 60% enrichment is how close it brings a country to weapons-grade material 4344. The enrichment work required to move from 60% to 90% is substantially less than the work needed to reach 60% from natural uranium 4546. This means a country with 60% enriched uranium stockpiles could potentially produce weapons-grade material in a matter of weeks or even days.
hnbad 3 hours ago [-]
This would be a lot more concerning if it wasn't widely known that Israel also illegally holds nuclear weapons of its own and therefore should have been sanctioned by the US for decades. Not having nukes is how Iran got here in the first place - the POTUS unilaterally withdrawing from their agreement and bombing them in the middle of negotiations. For all the portrayals of the Iranian government as "lunatics" over the years, getting to nuclear ASAP is the only logical move for a country in Iran's position - just look at how the US went back on its sabre rattling against North Korea once they demonstrated nuclear capabilities.
You don't have to think the Iranian government is in any way "good" but there's literally no logical reason for them not to desperately try to get their hands on nuclear weapons at this point. They have no reason to trust the West to ever follow through on any promises again.
recroad 3 hours ago [-]
You left out the part that they went past the 3.5% after Trump pulled out of the deal. While they were in it, they were complying fully as per IAEA and the US State department themselves.
Amezarak 3 hours ago [-]
I didn't leave out anything. I was making a factual statement that the Iranian nuclear program had already been "accelerated" to a point where objectively, with the engineering expertise they doubtlessly have, they could have potentially built a bomb within weeks or months, as the most difficult and time-consuming part was already done, which is why nonproliferation proponents get so upset about that level of enrichment.
Whether this is Trump's or Biden's or Joe Rogan's or a space alien's fault is for other commenters to discuss. I do not find the politics interesting. Nuclear science is interesting.
throaway23663 2 hours ago [-]
> they could have potentially built a bomb within weeks or months...
Come on now Netanyahu. They've been saying that for last 30 years, no one believes that anymore! The fact is Iran was adhering to the JCPOA and it could have been a viable solution to all this for years to come, until Trump pulled out.
pkulak 3 hours ago [-]
> Reopening the Strait of Hormuz within 30 days "under Iranian arrangements"
Oh my goodness. So it stays closed for the better part of a month (or more, who knows), then opens up with each ship paying Iran for passage. I very much look forward to how this will be spun as some kind of a "win" for the United States.
cosmicgadget 57 minutes ago [-]
I imagine: "Under Biden we would have surrendered to Iran and then the world would be destroyed by an alien probe looking for humpback whale sounds."
colonCapitalDee 3 hours ago [-]
We'll see if it happens. Quote: "mediators will facilitate a series of meetings this week. These pre-implementation discussions will lay the foundation for the technical talks and the official signing ceremony." It's concepts of a plan all over again
3eb7988a1663 3 hours ago [-]
With nuclear questions to be resolved at a later time. Wasn't total disarmament the core, non-negoitable for this entire conflict?
dools 3 hours ago [-]
The core non negotiable for the conflict was meeting a handful of Israel’s military objectives at the expense of virtually everyone else globally.
3eb7988a1663 3 hours ago [-]
For sure, but the eventually-settled-upon rationale was some kind of nuclear deterrence. To walk away with Iran (likely) to maintain its uranium stockpile + possible toll control of the strait is such a complete and utter self-own.
3 hours ago [-]
corvad 3 hours ago [-]
At the very least it should quell the markets for this week.
zahlman 3 hours ago [-]
Markets reached ATH this month and are only a couple percent off that mark. What is there to "quell"?
bhouston 3 hours ago [-]
Is this going to end Israel’s offensive into Lebanon? It isn’t clear. It may be that Israel has permanently expanded its borders into the ethnically cleansed southern Lebanon just like it has into Syria recently. This is what Katz is saying:
It's an agreement between the US and Iran. Israel will defend its people, whatever that takes, as any right-minded nation should, no matter how dispicable the tactics used by the other side.
hnbad 3 hours ago [-]
It's a war between Israel and the US vs Iran that was literally initiated by the US after a meeting between Trump and Netanyahu.
Also Israel is a rogue state that has been committing war crimes including genocide and is engaging in expansionist wars worse at this point than Russia's. It's in everyone's interest that Israel be either stopped or undergo a regime change that abandons Apartheid and creates a multicultural Western democracy.
throw378467 2 hours ago [-]
> is engaging in expansionist wars worse at this point than Russia's
Russia currently controls about 46,700 square miles of Ukrainian territory.
The entire Israel + West Bank, Gaza, Golan Heights, and areas currently occupied in southern Lebanon adds up to about 11,000 square miles.
It can all fit in 4 times in just the areas Russia has taken from Ukraine.
sillysaurusx 3 hours ago [-]
I wonder how the stock markets will react tomorrow. I know someone who turned $6k into $150k by buying options on war related news. The logic is that the markets will almost certainly go up, so bet big at a time like this.
It sounded like an easy way to lose $6k, but maybe the upside is worth the risk. I don’t have any experience to know whether this is a sufficiently good bet though.
zahlman 3 hours ago [-]
Institutional investors get to trade outside of hours that most ordinary people can't; presuming that this is net positive for markets, they will already be up when the bell rings.
calmbonsai 3 hours ago [-]
5 days is forever in the history of these negotiations.
I would be shocked if it actually happens.
epolanski 3 hours ago [-]
The Israeli will drag Trump again.
Animats 3 hours ago [-]
Confirmation from Iran's Security Council.[1]
It's just a 60-day cease fire extension, according to the New York Times.
Trump posted something on Truth Social. There's no announcement on the U.S. Department of State site. That's full of a deal between the US Government and the Ultimate Fighting Championship people.
Compare with the April 8th ceasefire.[2]
Al Jazeera, which reports on this in detail because their readership is in the target area, is trying to figure it out.[3]
Peace - in whatever form is something the world desperately needs at this point.
Having said that, I'll give it three days until Israel does some shit and undos all of this.
breatheoften 3 hours ago [-]
"For purposes of mine removal" -- what the hell is that line about ...
irishcoffee 3 hours ago [-]
I have it on good authority that Iran doesn’t know where all the mines are buried.
ggm 3 hours ago [-]
I have it on good authority there are still ww1 mines in the North Sea. Mines drift. At best you know the co-ordinates of where you released them from a ship.
irishcoffee 3 hours ago [-]
Yeah, the difference is these were laid months ago.
comrade1234 3 hours ago [-]
Surely trump deserves the Nobel prize for this deal!
zahlman 3 hours ago [-]
This is not any better than the reply about Obama. The intention of the snark is clear, and does not contribute to useful discourse. Please don't.
comrade1234 2 hours ago [-]
It's a ridiculous situation that requires ridicule. And further I will bet you (or polymarket) that someone will nominate trump for the Nobel prize for this deal.
jleyank 3 hours ago [-]
I think they prefer their winners to not have started the action that they're claiming credit for ending...
comrade1234 3 hours ago [-]
Someone will nominate him. Qatar? UAE?
mrcwinn 3 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
amanaplanacanal 3 hours ago [-]
I think the Obama prize was just a reaction to how terrible the Bush administration was, not that he actually deserved it.
Thegn 3 hours ago [-]
Yeah, if you watched Obama’s energy he had kind of a “Thanks guys, but why?” air about him through the whole thing.
netsharc 3 hours ago [-]
Somewhere it's written that he and his team discussed internally about refusing it, but thought that action would be considered arrogant and diplomatically bad form.
Meanwhile 17 years later...
mrcwinn 3 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
zahlman 3 hours ago [-]
> Please don't use Hacker News for political or ideological battle. It tramples curiosity.
peterbecich 3 hours ago [-]
What are the odds of the optimal deal being reached on Trump's birthday (Eastern Time)? Who knows, maybe US stalled before, and/or gave a little extra concession to conclude today.
dav_Oz 2 hours ago [-]
You are probably right it was timed deliberately this way, this is why the Iranians also
didn't rush it ...
> Iran waited until the clock passed midnight local time to finalize the agreement, because it did not want the momentous occasion to coincide with President Trump’s birthday on Sunday, according to two Iranian officials who could not be identified because of the matter’s sensitivity. The seven-and-half-hour time difference allowed both Tehran and Washington to claim their preferred version of when the deal was finalized. President Trump had said it would be on Sunday, and Iran had said it would be on a later day.[0]
Reading through the proposal Iran put out, it sounds like Trump's surrendered?
1- Permanent and immediate cessation of war on all fronts, including Lebanon
- You know Israel won't let that happen
2- America's commitment not to interfere in Iran's internal affairs and to respect the sovereignty of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
- No regime change
3- Complete removal of the naval blockade within 30 days
- Iran gets its oil money back.
4- America's commitment to the withdrawal of its forces from around Iran
- We leave altogether
5- Reopening the Strait of Hormuz within 30 days with Iranian arrangements
- Iran gets to charge its "service" fees
6- Suspension of sanctions on the sale of oil, petrochemical products and derivatives and Iran's full access to its financial resources.
- Oil money again
7- Necessity of presenting plans for the reconstruction of Iran in the amount of at least 300 billion dollars by the US and its allies
- We rebuild freakin Iran.
FFS. I think I'm done reading before we give them American Samoa and a puppy.
petilon 3 hours ago [-]
Trump says "The Deal with the Islamic Republic of Iran is now complete." The deal opens the Strait of Hormuz to all, while leaving the thorniest nuclear issues for another day.
So basically the same as when the war started.
mandeepj 34 minutes ago [-]
More cash with Iran now
dools 3 hours ago [-]
Slightly worse by the sounds of it
rwmj 3 hours ago [-]
Same, minus the people who died.
ep103 3 hours ago [-]
According to the NY times, its a 60 day ceasefire on all fronts, and a return to pre-war status on issues like the (blockade, tolls, nuclear program, sanctions) starting this coming Friday. Also on Friday, a new round of negotiations will begin to discuss these issues.
So basically, both sides agreed to go back to the pre-war status quo for 60 days while negotiations continue.
Except one thing so far, apparently Trump has agreed to unfreeze Iranian financial assets.
Remember: the reason Trump said Obama's nuclear agreement was terrible was because Obama was "paying the Iranians to not develop nuclear weapons". What Obama did, was pay them out of these frozen assets. Which trump just gave them back for free, and without a nuclear deal.
esseph 3 hours ago [-]
Trump said they would sign something today.
An hour later, now they're not signing anything until Friday.
jeffbee 3 hours ago [-]
Total capitulation by America, Israel might not even be on-board with this deal, and Trump still has 5 days to chicken out or forget.
energy123 3 hours ago [-]
He did say unconditional surrender
blowsand 3 hours ago [-]
Is your armchair comfortable? Would you like a beverage before your next play?
fightforcause 3 hours ago [-]
[dead]
lwansbrough 3 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
oblio 3 hours ago [-]
No, it's not a waste.
That would imply that the end result will be 0.
Nooo, it will be much worse. The end result will be a huge net negative. This administration will bring down the US a lot.
drnick1 3 hours ago [-]
We had a once in a lifetime opportunity to completely destroy the theocratic regime and we did not finish the job. This "deal" (or what transpired of it) is pathetic and will only allow the mullahs to rearm and come back stronger in the future. We will live to regret not resuming combat operations and weakening the regime until it isn't a threat to anyone.
PaulHoule 2 hours ago [-]
It is one thing to destroy the regime, it is another thing to build something stable which isn’t going to spread terrorism.
comrade1234 3 hours ago [-]
That would require an invading force. Not worth it when we could keep Iran isolated and under sanctions and under nuclear inspections by doing nothing.
cosmicgadget 36 minutes ago [-]
They're pretty good at projecting power in the region though.
kennywinker 3 hours ago [-]
Being attacked strengthens a nations unity, strengthens regimes, and eliminates room for dissent - did you miss 9/11? Oct 7th? Pearl harbour? The blitz?
ergocoder 3 hours ago [-]
It's the last bump before I liquidate all my stocks. I predict that the crash will come at the end or the beginning of the next president which is likely democrat.
Not that it's democrat's fault but democrat is more disciplined
LPisGood 3 hours ago [-]
I have some thoughts on that. It’s possible that the current administration’s lack of oversight has artificially propped up the stock market. If the next president decides to return to a more traditional rules based structure, the market will probably react very poorly. US debt is also getting more expensive and interest is ballooning.
Making the country less desirable to the most skilled immigrants and eroding the capabilities of the strongest research universities will also mean there is probably hell to pay in the medium term.
ergocoder 3 hours ago [-]
The swing of the market based on the president's crazy tweets is just insane. This cannot go on for much longer. I will be parking my money at a safer place
zahlman 2 hours ago [-]
Time in the market beats timing the market, bears have predicted (large number) out of the last (smaller number) recessions, etc. None of this is novel. "Predicting" a stock crash due to political reasons is effectively just a fancy restatement of anti-those-politics views; and it isn't substantive, especially when the prediction comes with a years-long window.
cosmicgadget 50 minutes ago [-]
You need to caveat this with "... if you want to be lazy and ignorant of your port." Otherwise there is so, so much evidence that it is flat wrong.
ergocoder 35 minutes ago [-]
Yeah, meanwhile all the wealthy people actively manage their port with an insane amount of efforts. They would compensate hedge fund manager with insane amount of money.
Then, they turn around and tell average people to forget about the investment. Just park your money in the index fund over the long run. I mean, if you are either stupid or don't have time, then yeah please only do index fund.
cosmicgadget 28 minutes ago [-]
"But my 401k advisor showed me a chart!"
newaccountman2 3 hours ago [-]
That's like 2.5 years from now--you don't think crash will happen before then?
ergocoder 3 hours ago [-]
I think it may happen before then. That's why I'm thinking of liquidating it soon-ish. Trump is doing too much crazy things. He cannot prop up the market for that long.
I plan to put most of the money in US t-bill (4 week) to earn 3% for now.
cosmicgadget 47 minutes ago [-]
Check out spring of 2020. Rate cuts and QE if he can get control of the Fed.
mhb 3 hours ago [-]
And what are you going to do with that money?
ergocoder 3 hours ago [-]
US t-bill (4w) until the market crashes. For 401K, I'll just move it to money market/bond.
We don't really need to maximize the profits all the time. Not losing the money is good too.
an_guy 3 hours ago [-]
Well Obama gave $3 billion dollars in cash to Iran. Atleast he didn't do that, right? RIGHT???
LPisGood 3 hours ago [-]
Looks like 25 billion this time around.
kennywinker 3 hours ago [-]
> The US and its allies delivering reconstruction plans for Iran worth at least $300bn
throw03172019 3 hours ago [-]
It will be more.
beefmumbai 3 hours ago [-]
They will never lear...
firesteelrain 3 hours ago [-]
I don’t know how this is worse for the US or the World. Iran’s leadership and military was decapitated. It’s in the best interest of US, Europe and Israel and the Middle East. The nuclear program had a huge setback.
What are the counter arguments to these facts if we really end up in peace with Iran along with the bad actors gone too?
cosmicgadget 37 minutes ago [-]
Are the bad actors gone?
recroad 3 hours ago [-]
Bad actors gone? I see Trump and Israel still around.
firesteelrain 34 minutes ago [-]
I don’t think they are the bad actors.
3 hours ago [-]
ls612 3 hours ago [-]
if the strait actually reopens and Iran actually ships the enriched uranium out of the country this is a reasonable outcome imo. My concern centers on the fact that neither of these two outcomes are guaranteed by a long shot at this point.
Key bullets:
What Iran gets:
* The U.S. agrees to release $25 billion of Iran’s frozen assets, including via direct cash transfers, cooperation among regional countries, and financial credit lines.
* Washington, in coordination with its regional allies, would prepare a reconstruction and development plan for Iran, to be negotiated and agreed with Tehran within 60 days.
What the US gets:
* Tehran agrees that it will neither produce nor acquire nuclear weapons.
* Pending a final agreement, Iran would maintain the current status of its nuclear programme, refraining from further uranium enrichment and expansion of nuclear facilities.
* The United States agrees to allow Iran to dilute its stockpile of highly enriched uranium on Iranian soil under a future comprehensive agreement.
* Iran’s nuclear programme, uranium enrichment activities and mechanisms for handling its stockpile of highly enriched uranium would be negotiated within 60 days of the memorandum and addressed in a final agreement.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran_nuclear_deal
Of course they do. They have always said they don’t want nuclear weapons while pursuing them relentlessly.
> Iran’s nuclear programme, uranium enrichment activities and mechanisms for handling its stockpile of highly enriched uranium would be negotiated within 60 days of the memorandum and addressed in a final agreement.
If that is still to be discussed, then what have they been discussing so far? That has always been the main issue.
If the agreement means Iran seriously agrees to dilute (which boils down to destroying) it's nuclear stockpile, with UN or US or ... witnesses, that's pretty damn new.
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/americas-spies-say-ira... https://www.foxnews.com/politics/us-intel-community-agreed-b...
Reminder, the reason Trump hated the Obama deal was because he construed it as paying Iran not to develop nuclear weapons. Obama was paying Iran with the money from Iran's frozen assets. Trump's deal gives them that money, and has no nuclear agreement.
The US' limitations in its ability to project power have been exposed. Having American bases in the middle east has been shown to be nothing but a liability for host countries. And Iran has proven that it can withstand anything the US is willing to throw at it, and hit back hard, over a relatively prolonged period.
And Iran has shown that its constitution is strong and power succession is effective even after a massive decapitation strike. There was seemingly zero turmoil, control appears to have been maintained without issue.
And Iran's non nuclear option of controlling the strait has been tested andd shown to be highly effective.
And Iran has gained significant operational experience with its massive stores of drones and missles.
And the US has lost multiple billion dollar intelligence installations in the region.
And Americans have been made aware of the Israel lobby like never before, and Trump is in a very difficult position heading into the midterms.
Also, the idiot in the WH, single handedly turned Iran's many anti-regime citizens to pro-regime and patriotic.
which is of course the real kicker, The Gulf states are going to pay for the adventure and deal with an emboldened Iran and their damaged economies and infrastructure. Having US bases in the region has turned from a security guarantee into a disaster, the implications of this are pretty obvious.
The current crisis is entirely because Trump trashed that agreement in the first place.
https://www.iaea.org/newscenter/pressreleases/iaea-director-...
During the time of JCPOA (original, between Iran and the P5+1) inspectors had access to where they wanted to go (sometimes with friction, sure) and were able to place tamper resistant / tamper revealing instrumentation, air filters, and spectrometers - effectively creating a data record that could place a stochastic cap on {enrichment level, volume}.
After Trump ripped up that agreement during his first term, withdrawing from the pact in 2018, that was no longer the case - leading to your linked 2023 statement.
JCPOA was never a permanent solution. Under JCPOA, Iran agreed to temporarily cap enrichment for 15 years until 2030. After which, Iran could enrich freely.
JCPOA had no extension framework, the deal could not be extended without being renegotiated. And Iranian officials refused to agree to permanent enrichment caps, they said the 15-year sunset on enrichment was a non-negotiable.
According to whom? I know there's one country who says Iran is two weeks away from nuclear weapons, but who else?
Former Iranian Majles member Ali Motahari said in an April 24, 2022 interview on ISCA News (Iran) that when Iran began developing its nuclear program, the goal was to build a nuclear bomb. He said that there is no need to beat around the bush, and that the bomb would have been used as a "means of intimidation" in accordance with a Quranic verse about striking "fear in the hearts of the enemies of Allah."
"When we began our nuclear activity, our goal was indeed to build a bomb,” former Iranian politician Ali Motahari told ISCA News. “There is no need to beat around the bush,” he said.
When asked if saying this publicly will negatively affect the ongoing JCPOA negotiations, Motahari answered: "Nobody notices what I am saying."
https://www.memri.org/tv/former-iranian-majles-member-motaha...
https://www.iranintl.com/en/202204245312
He wasn't a member at the time of those statements nor did he have any involvement in their nuclear program. That's misleading to say the least.
Ali Motahari—former member of Iran’s Parliament—clarified that the interview dates back to May 2022, when he neither held a parliamentary seat nor any official role in nuclear affairs.[0]
So besides a single guy in Iran, are there official delegations that have concluded Iran was developing nuclear weapons? The US has had two National Intelligence Estimates, which consists of all 18 agencies in the intelligence community, conclude that they were not developing nukes.
0: https://wanaen.com/trump-shares-old-ali-motahari-interview-o...
You're misreading your own sources. The 2007 NIE and Gabbard's 2025 testimony both describe a nuclear weapons program that Iran "suspended in 2003". They confirm a nuclear weapons program existed, the opposite of what you're claiming.
And you want an official source: the IAEA concluded in May 2025 that Iran ran an "undeclared structured nuclear program" until the early 2000s using undeclared material. Then it found Iran in formal non-compliance in June of last year.
"Not building a warhead today" and "never pursued weapons" are different claims, and you swapped one for the other.
https://www.iaea.org/newscenter/statements/iaea-director-gen...
> IAEA concluded in May 2025 that Iran ran an "undeclared structured nuclear program" until the early 2000s
"nuclear program" is not the same as a weapons program and the IAEA sounding alarm bells over policy violations is not a conclusion that Iran is/was on a nuclear warpath.
That said, this:
has little weight given these were / are the same US intell agencies that were blindsided and caught pants down unaware and in the dark about the 1998 India / Pakistan nuclear test exchange.Well that's convenient, isn't it.
If JCPOA was followed by both Iran and the US to the letter, we would face a similar crisis to the one seen today, except around 2031-2035.
What matters is ongoing engagement and monitoring, it's a far more tractable position than standoffs with zero knowledge or interaction.
Claiming "agreements are renegotiated and extended" is hypothetical. What incentive does Iran have to agree to enrichment caps post-2030? Why would Iran give up its strongest negotiating card, its nuclear program?
* Global sanctions relief
* $100-150 billion in frozen assets
* Access to the global oil market
Iran in 2030 under JCPOA already has access to all three. The US already played its best cards to get Iran to agree to JCPOA. The US has little new to offer, other than resumed sanctions.
And with JCPOA and its possible continuation, that was a joint agreement among a number of countries - in the current situation, it’s just the U.S. trying to impose its will on other countries to go along with any carrots/sticks.
And all of these have only bought time and money for the regime to continue its nuclear ambitions, terrorism plans, and oppress the people of Iran, including almost daily executions of innocent protestors during the last few months as these negotiations went on.
The truth is, it won’t be possible to solve this issue with this approach. You can’t get a snake to sign a document to agree not to be poisonous anymore.
Now it is the wests problem (with the strait) but even now no one is going to send an army to Iran.
I know my views are probably overly simplistic.
>According to remarks carried by the Tasnim news agency, Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi said negotiations for a final deal will be held during a 60-day period, after verifying that the US implemented its commitments under the deal, including ending hostilities, lifting the blockade, and releasing frozen assets.
So, it's an even worse position for the US than before launching the war.
What is surprising is how co-opted the Biden admin was by Israel, that they didn't even bother to even consider reentering it despite it being a Democratic party "win" when it was first announced.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran%E2%80%93United_States_rel...
Iran was naive enough to trust the US twice in the last year and HAD THEIR NEGOTIATING TEAM BOMBED! I'm shocked they even trust the US to hold up to the deal they signed today. I'm guessing US concessions on frozen assets was just too much to pass up.
> What is surprising is how co-opted the Biden admin was by Israel, that they didn't even bother to even consider reentering it
True but continuing the war is worse for Trump. There was no real way to win.
It looks like it is more an MoU than a deal, and I think that allows Trump the cover to drip feed out how humiliating it is, because this isn't the kind of band-aid you rip off all at once.
If I were a betting man I would bet that between now and Friday there will be too much news coverage of just how humiliating this is for the USA, how bad a deal it is, and how much of failure it is, and Trump himself will pull out of the deal. This has, allegedly, happened at least once.
But Iran now seem to be a bit better schooled in how to actually get him to agree, so perhaps they will be persuaded to smile a shit-eating grin while he takes a victory lap, and simply keep the most humiliating details of it under wraps until he signs.
How long it is before Trump claims to renegotiate it, who knows. Just the other day Trump said he might not renew USMCA — his own prior great achievement of loudly renegotiating NAFTA to be not significantly worse.
The US president has been played like a fool by the Israelis and Iran has inflicted a humiliating defeat to the US and its allies by leveraging cheap asymmetric warfare.
(Intentionally targeting civilian infrastructure is, of course, a war crime.)
But heck, if I were Iran I'd be wary after November. With Russia-style election rigging and spineless congress, Trump-Hegseth might resume the war crimes...
How do they still have any cards ?
There have been persistent rumours that Iran will be allowed to charge new "environmental fees" for access, "to protect the ecosystem of the Strait" or somesuch.
(Secretary of War and former Fox News weekend anchor Pete Hegseth was on the news just this evening saying that the USA has been in control of the Strait the whole time, so I think the USA is arguing against your (correct) characterisation of the situation.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_2026_Iran_wa...
https://iran-cost-ticker.com/
[1] https://old.reddit.com/r/trumptweets/comments/1u5xpoe/061426...
https://www.dawn.com/news/2007544/cannot-impose-tolls-on-str...
(In other words, every barrel of oil that passes through the straight will now have an $X risk surcharge on it, whether or not that surcharge ends up in Iran's coffers.)
https://fordow.net/blog/posts/enriched-uranium-proliferation...
Is a good explainer about uranium enrichment.
> The most alarming aspect of 60% enrichment is how close it brings a country to weapons-grade material 4344. The enrichment work required to move from 60% to 90% is substantially less than the work needed to reach 60% from natural uranium 4546. This means a country with 60% enriched uranium stockpiles could potentially produce weapons-grade material in a matter of weeks or even days.
You don't have to think the Iranian government is in any way "good" but there's literally no logical reason for them not to desperately try to get their hands on nuclear weapons at this point. They have no reason to trust the West to ever follow through on any promises again.
Whether this is Trump's or Biden's or Joe Rogan's or a space alien's fault is for other commenters to discuss. I do not find the politics interesting. Nuclear science is interesting.
Come on now Netanyahu. They've been saying that for last 30 years, no one believes that anymore! The fact is Iran was adhering to the JCPOA and it could have been a viable solution to all this for years to come, until Trump pulled out.
Oh my goodness. So it stays closed for the better part of a month (or more, who knows), then opens up with each ship paying Iran for passage. I very much look forward to how this will be spun as some kind of a "win" for the United States.
https://www.ynetnews.com/article/qeko153ri
Also Israel is a rogue state that has been committing war crimes including genocide and is engaging in expansionist wars worse at this point than Russia's. It's in everyone's interest that Israel be either stopped or undergo a regime change that abandons Apartheid and creates a multicultural Western democracy.
Russia currently controls about 46,700 square miles of Ukrainian territory.
The entire Israel + West Bank, Gaza, Golan Heights, and areas currently occupied in southern Lebanon adds up to about 11,000 square miles.
It can all fit in 4 times in just the areas Russia has taken from Ukraine.
It sounded like an easy way to lose $6k, but maybe the upside is worth the risk. I don’t have any experience to know whether this is a sufficiently good bet though.
I would be shocked if it actually happens.
It's just a 60-day cease fire extension, according to the New York Times.
Trump posted something on Truth Social. There's no announcement on the U.S. Department of State site. That's full of a deal between the US Government and the Ultimate Fighting Championship people.
Compare with the April 8th ceasefire.[2]
Al Jazeera, which reports on this in detail because their readership is in the target area, is trying to figure it out.[3]
[1] https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202606139149
[2] https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/4/8/us-iran-ceasefire-de...
[3] https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/6/14/will-the-us-iran-de...
Meanwhile 17 years later...
> Iran waited until the clock passed midnight local time to finalize the agreement, because it did not want the momentous occasion to coincide with President Trump’s birthday on Sunday, according to two Iranian officials who could not be identified because of the matter’s sensitivity. The seven-and-half-hour time difference allowed both Tehran and Washington to claim their preferred version of when the deal was finalized. President Trump had said it would be on Sunday, and Iran had said it would be on a later day.[0]
[0]https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/06/14/world/iran-war-trump...
1- Permanent and immediate cessation of war on all fronts, including Lebanon
- You know Israel won't let that happen
2- America's commitment not to interfere in Iran's internal affairs and to respect the sovereignty of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
- No regime change
3- Complete removal of the naval blockade within 30 days
- Iran gets its oil money back.
4- America's commitment to the withdrawal of its forces from around Iran
- We leave altogether
5- Reopening the Strait of Hormuz within 30 days with Iranian arrangements
- Iran gets to charge its "service" fees
6- Suspension of sanctions on the sale of oil, petrochemical products and derivatives and Iran's full access to its financial resources.
- Oil money again
7- Necessity of presenting plans for the reconstruction of Iran in the amount of at least 300 billion dollars by the US and its allies
- We rebuild freakin Iran.
FFS. I think I'm done reading before we give them American Samoa and a puppy.
So basically the same as when the war started.
So basically, both sides agreed to go back to the pre-war status quo for 60 days while negotiations continue.
Except one thing so far, apparently Trump has agreed to unfreeze Iranian financial assets.
Remember: the reason Trump said Obama's nuclear agreement was terrible was because Obama was "paying the Iranians to not develop nuclear weapons". What Obama did, was pay them out of these frozen assets. Which trump just gave them back for free, and without a nuclear deal.
An hour later, now they're not signing anything until Friday.
That would imply that the end result will be 0.
Nooo, it will be much worse. The end result will be a huge net negative. This administration will bring down the US a lot.
Not that it's democrat's fault but democrat is more disciplined
Making the country less desirable to the most skilled immigrants and eroding the capabilities of the strongest research universities will also mean there is probably hell to pay in the medium term.
Then, they turn around and tell average people to forget about the investment. Just park your money in the index fund over the long run. I mean, if you are either stupid or don't have time, then yeah please only do index fund.
I plan to put most of the money in US t-bill (4 week) to earn 3% for now.
We don't really need to maximize the profits all the time. Not losing the money is good too.
What are the counter arguments to these facts if we really end up in peace with Iran along with the bad actors gone too?