U.S. Vice President JD Vance said the agreement with Iran was signed digitally last night and that no funds have been released to Tehran, according to a channel post citing his remarks.
U.S. Vice President JD Vance stated on Monday that the agreement between the United States and Iran was signed digitally on Sunday night, according to a post on a subscribed channel. Vance emphasized that no funds have yet been released to Iran, and that any such release would only occur if Tehran genuinely changes its behavior.
The statement follows a morning report of Vance and envoy Steve Witkoff embracing after news of a deal broke. As The Zioneer reported earlier on Monday, Vance told ABC News that Iran and the U.S. signed a bilateral agreement digitally, without disclosing its terms. The new remarks clarify the financial conditionality of the accord.
No official confirmation of the full terms has been published, and the scope of the agreement remains unverified by independent sources. The channel posting Vance's latest comment is a single-source feed, and the details of the digital signing process have not been corroborated by U.S. government channels.
6 developments
- StrongTrump finalizes 'historic' Iran deal, says Strait of Hormuz to reopen
- DevelopingAl-Hadath: US, Iran to virtually sign MOU; Vance and Qalibaf to attend
- ConfirmedIran's Tasnim adds details on US-Iran MOU: last-minute changes, Hormuz opening delayed
- StrongTrump says Strait of Hormuz to reopen as early as Saturday or Monday
Source and signal
- Internal intake
