Iran-U. S War: Washington, Tehran interim deal stalled over $6 billion to $12 billion of frozen funds? Read shocking report

U.S. President Donald Trump has repeatedly said a deal is close, while also threatening to intensify bombing.

Iran-U. S War: Washington, Tehran interim deal stalled over $6 billion to $12 billion of frozen funds? Read shocking report
Iran and the United States were still exchanging messages over details of a memorandum of understanding amid the ongoing confrontation between Tehran and Washington. Efforts to reach an interim deal to end hostilities between Iran and the U.S. have intensified, three Iranian sources and a European official told Reuters on Thursday, despite strikes launched by both sides, as the warring parties discuss how to release frozen Iranian funds, as per a report.

The Iranian sources said a political understanding had been reached, but some issues remained to be discussed ‌in detail, including a ⁠mechanism for ⁠the release of tens of billions of dollars of Iranian oil revenues frozen in foreign banks. "Iran wants $6 billion to $12 billion of its frozen funds to be ​released to Tehran, while Washington wants to release funds in stages for humanitarian goods and rejects returning funds to Iran outright," Reuters reported quoting Iranian sources.

A senior European official said: "Right now, talks are focusing very precisely on the technical details and the financial amount — in short, the level of liquidity available to Iran."


For its own survival, the clerical establishment's priority is not a comprehensive settlement ​but a framework that can restore minimum breathing space for the country by ⁠unlocking its ‌frozen assets and ending the war, the Iranian sources said. One of the Iranian sources said the military ​action between the ​two sides had reached an impasse with neither side able to break the stalemate.

This war, from ⁠a military standpoint, is a dead end. The Americans could not achieve their ​goals by attacking Iran. There has been progress in negotiations, he said. The recent military confrontations ​could be preparations for announcing an agreement. Of course, anything is possible, even a return to full-scale war, the sources said.


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Better Deal for Donald Trump?


U.S. President Donald Trump has repeatedly said a deal is close, while also threatening to intensify bombing.

Analysts have said he was concerned how any agreement with Iran compared to the nuclear deal reached in 2015 between Tehran and world powers, when President Barack Obama was in office. Trump criticised that deal, including financial terms offered to Iran. He pulled ‌the U.S. out in 2018 when he was in office.

Trump posted on his Truth Social account on May 24 that any deal he secured with Iran "will be a good and proper one, not like ​the one made by ​Obama, which gave Iran massive amounts ⁠of CASH, and a clear and open path to a Nuclear Weapon."
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The U.S. blockade on Iran's ports and Tehran's grip on the Strait of Hormuz have sustained mutual pressure, driving up economic costs while leaving the risk of renewed fighting unresolved.

Another Iranian ​source said Tehran wanted to get the U.S. naval blockade lifted, citing economic strains.
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Iran, for various reasons — especially economic pressures and a population exhausted by war and uncertainty — seeks an end to a "no war, no peace" situation, the sources said.
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