Sky News Arabia reports the emerging US-Iran deal provides Tehran with approximately $300 billion and full control over the Strait of Hormuz — terms dramatically larger than the Obama-era deal, which gave Iran $150 billion. The report, by an Arabic-language outlet, has not been independently confirmed.
The reported an item from 'רק נטו חדשות בטלגרם' citing Sky News Arabia, which claims the emerging US-Iran deal gives Tehran roughly $300 billion and full control over the Strait of Hormuz, with all sanctions abolished. The claim is a single-source report from an Arabic news outlet, not yet corroborated by Israeli or Western media. The Zioneer has previously reported (Wed 12:38) that the MOU text mentions a $300 billion reconstruction fund and stipulates Iran will keep the strait open — the Sky News framing positions it as a far larger concession (outright 'control') and a larger cash figure than the Obama-era $150 billion. As of 12:57 Jerusalem, no official confirmation or denial from Washington, Jerusalem, or Tehran has emerged. The report may reflect Iranian media interpretation or a source within Iran; clarity remains pending.
- StrongAnalysts Warn Trump's Iran Deal May Prioritize Hormuz Stability Over Israeli Security
- ConfirmedTrump declares Iran 'finished' as 200 oil tankers cross Strait of Hormuz
- StrongTrump: US and Iran close to 60-day ceasefire deal, Strait of Hormuz to reopen
- StrongIran Demands Hormuz Revenue, Says Trump Post Contradicts Interim Deal
Source and signal
- Internal intake
