A source reports that Israel's military and political leadership is still trying to decipher what it calls the 'greatest mystery' — the agreement between the US and Iran. The source repeats that Iran has not signed any agreement, and questions who in Tehran would dare to sign such a deal.
A brief dispatch from an Israeli source — a news organization — on Monday morning captures the continuing bewilderment within Israel's defense and political establishment over the status of a reported U.S.-Iran understanding. The source describes the affair as the 'greatest mystery' still being decoded, reiterates that Iran has not signed any agreement, and poses the pointed question of who in Tehran would dare to put pen to paper on such a deal. This remark echoes the source's earlier warning published overnight (01:39 Jerusalem) that current reports are a one-sided American rush toward a deal and that Iran will not give up its uranium or enrichment capability. As The Zioneer has reported over the past week (Friday, June 12 through early Monday), the affair is marked by contradictory signals: Israeli officials insist no binding agreement exists, U.S. statements suggest a memorandum is near, and Iran's own institutions — including the IRGC — have denied any finalized deal. A senior Israeli official told The Zioneer on Friday that any expected signing would be a non-binding memorandum of understanding, with real negotiations on missiles, proxies, and enrichment still ahead. The new source adds no fresh factual detail about signing, but underscores that the confusion persists at the highest levels in Jerusalem.
2 developments
Source and signal
A single-sourced dispatch is never rated Confirmed or Strong. Its Signal strengthens only when a second, independent source corroborates it.
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