A report by Amichai Stein of i24NEWS reveals the terms Iran has presented in a draft agreement with the United States. Tehran demands an immediate halt to fighting on all fronts, an American withdrawal from the region, and a compensation package of at least $300 billion. The document states that Iran's missile program and support for regional proxies are not open for negotiation.
A new report by Amichai Stein of i24NEWS, published shortly after 02:00 Jerusalem, details the terms Iran has inserted into a draft memorandum of understanding with the United States. The document lists non-negotiable Iranian demands: an immediate ceasefire on all fronts, a full American military withdrawal from the region, and compensation no smaller than $300 billion. The draft explicitly states that Iran's ballistic missile program and its support for proxy forces across the Middle East will not be subject to any negotiation.
This report expands on a thread The Zioneer has tracked since late Sunday evening. At 00:36 Jerusalem, we reported that an emerging US-Iran framework included an immediate Lebanon ceasefire. At 00:24 Jerusalem we reported that Tehran had published a full 14-article draft MOU listing terms including a permanent ceasefire, the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, suspension of oil sanctions, and the release of $24 billion in frozen assets — and earlier, at 00:24 Jerusalem, we also reported a Pakistan government statement that included a $300 billion compensation fund and other terms. The new i24NEWS report adds the $300 billion compensation figure alongside the explicit exclusion of Iran's missile and proxy programs from talks, reinforcing earlier language from the Iranian draft that had already excluded those items.
As The Zioneer reported on Friday June 12 at 11:14 Jerusalem, Tehran's version of the framework has long included a $300 billion investment fund and the exclusion of its missile program. The earlier version published by Pakistan had also listed a $300 billion fund. The current report from i24NEWS, credited to Stein, represents a single source; no official US, Israeli, or Iranian confirmation has been issued for these specific terms.
What remains open: the status of the compensation figure as non-negotiable versus a starting position, and whether the exclusion of missiles and proxies from the agenda is formalized in the final text or remains a stated demand. No official response from the US administration or from Jerusalem has been received.
5 developments
- StrongAbu Ali Express publishes Iran's 14-article draft US-Iran agreement claims
- StrongSenior US official: MOU details to be published within 24-48 hours
- DevelopingIranian media reports details of draft US-Iran agreement
- DevelopingIsraeli analyst warns emerging US-Iran MOU is a strategic trap for Jerusalem
Source and signal
- Internal intake
