A senior American official said an investment fund worth $300 billion will move forward only if Iran fulfills its nuclear commitments, according to a report cited on the source. The fund appears to be a larger, long-term reconstruction vehicle, distinct from the frozen-asset releases of $12–25 billion previously reported.
A senior American official told an unnamed outlet that a $300 billion investment fund for Iran will be launched only if Tehran complies with its nuclear commitments, according to a Telegram summary of the full report. The figure is an order of magnitude larger than previously discussed frozen-asset figures ($12–25 billion) and appears to represent a broader post-agreement reconstruction vehicle — similar in scale to what Senator Lindsey Graham recently criticized as a 'Marshall Plan for the Nazis' if Iran remained an adversary. The source message does not specify which US official made the statement or the exact terms of compliance required. The Zioneer has previously reported on the emerging US-Iran nuclear framework, including five principles detailed by a senior US official to Israel Hayom and the conditional release of frozen Iranian funds. This latest detail suggests a significant long-term economic incentive is on the table, calibrated to Iran's adherence. The report remains single-source and unattributed beyond 'senior American official,' pending further corroboration.
- DevelopingUS official: No frozen funds released until Iran fulfills commitments
- StrongAnalyst: US sees major nuclear progress with Iran; deadlock over $25B frozen funds
- StrongReuters: UAE agrees to release ~$10B in frozen Iranian funds, $3B reportedly transferred
- StrongSenior White House official: Next 2-3 weeks will determine if full Iran deal possible
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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