Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 13
Trump Says US Will Sign Iran Deal Sunday, Reopening Hormuz and Blocking Nuclear Arms
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 13

Trump Says US Will Sign Iran Deal Sunday, Reopening Hormuz and Blocking Nuclear Arms

3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jun 13

Summary

  • Sunday is the target for a US-Iran agreement, Trump said, casting it as a peace deal that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz and stop Tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.
  • Iranian and Pakistani officials also signaled a deal was near, but disagreed on timing: Pakistan's prime minister said an electronic signing could come within 24 hours, while Iran's foreign ministry said it would not happen Sunday.
  • The proposed accord would follow a three-month war and renewed clashes near Hormuz, where US forces shot down Iranian attack drones hours after Iran's foreign minister declared his country the war's winner.
  • Key terms remain disputed: Iranian accounts mention $24 billion in frozen assets, sanctions relief and a 60-day nuclear talks window, while US officials say Iran's nuclear material would be destroyed and funds withheld pending compliance.
  • The prospect of a deal has also sharpened friction with Israel, where Benjamin Netanyahu has resisted US pressure to limit operations in Lebanon as Washington pushes for an accord with Tehran.

Insights

Has the Hormuz crisis permanently broken global supply chains, regardless of any potential agreement?
With Iran publicly refuting the deal, is a wider regional conflict now more likely than peace?

On the Brink of Fragile Peace: The 2026 US-Iran Interim Deal, Its Provisions, and Global Reactions

Overview

As of June 13, 2026, efforts to finalize an interim agreement between Iran and the United States have intensified, with both sides exchanging messages and coming closer to a breakthrough. Iranian and Western officials agree that a political understanding has largely been achieved, though detailed discussions on key issues—especially the release of Iranian frozen funds—are still ongoing. This progress follows months of escalating conflict and mutual exhaustion, driving both nations to seek de-escalation. The interim deal aims to provide immediate relief and stability, but leaves major disputes unresolved, making the current peace fragile and dependent on further negotiations.

...