Iran has threatened that the recently signed nuclear framework — the 'Islamabad Agreement' — will not be implemented without a full US withdrawal from the region and the release of $12 billion in frozen Iranian funds, according to Amit Segal (N12). The threat follows the signing of the framework and echoes earlier demands by IRGC commanders.
Iran issued a new threat on Monday morning following the signing of the leaked US-Iran nuclear framework, known as the 'Islamabad Agreement'. According to reporter Amit Segal (N12), Tehran warned that the agreement will not be implemented unless the United States carries out a full military and political withdrawal from the region and unfreezes $12 billion in Iranian assets. This ultimatum aligns with previous hard-line statements by IRGC Commander Ahmad Vahidi, who last week reportedly demanded immediate cash payment upon any deal signing, as The Zioneer previously covered. The leaked memorandum of understanding had already raised concerns: it committed the US to releasing $12 billion before negotiations even begin, suspending oil sanctions, and removing Iran's missile program and regional proxy support from the final agenda. The new Iranian threat suggests that even after signing, implementation remains conditional on maximalist demands — raising doubts about whether the framework can take effect at all.
2 developments
- StrongTrump: Iran deal details to be published soon; no sanctions relief until Iran complies
- DevelopingIran: No nuclear talks until US fulfills its obligations
- DevelopingUS official: No frozen funds released until Iran fulfills commitments
- DevelopingIranian Foreign Ministry adviser: No deal with Trump until all Iranian demands met
Source and signal
- Internal intake
