Mediators say Iran and the United States have agreed on a roadmap to reach a final nuclear deal within 60 days, with talks expected to continue all week. The announcement was reported by the Times of Israel, citing the mediators. The 60-day framework was first established by the U.S. side last week.
Mediators announced early Monday that the United States and Iran have agreed on a 60-day roadmap to finalize a nuclear deal, with negotiations set to continue throughout the week. The announcement — reported by the Times of Israel — comes hours after an 18-hour round of US-Iran talks in Qatar concluded with Tehran reporting "good progress."
As The Zioneer reported on Monday at 04:17 Jerusalem, Qatar and Pakistan had already announced a joint 60-day roadmap for the final deal and established a communication channel to prevent incidents in the Strait of Hormuz. The new mediators' statement follows that announcement but provides additional detail on the timeframe and confirms the talks will continue intensively.
The 60-day deadline was initially set by U.S. President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance in early June, with Vance stating on June 18 that the negotiation period begins Thursday. Iran and the U.S. had earlier signaled the talks were at an advanced stage, with Iran's Foreign Ministry saying on June 12 that most issues had been agreed and a draft MOU was under review.
Key details — including the specific contents of the roadmap and which unresolved issues remain — have not yet been publicly disclosed. The mediators' statement is attributed to unnamed sources; the Times of Israel report does not name the mediators.
2 developments
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- StrongIran details 60-day nuclear talks timeline, sanctions relief clauses in Islamabad MoU
- DevelopingTrump warns Iran to reach deal within 60 days
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