US Signs 14-Point Iran MOU, Offering Billions in Relief as Trump Reverses $150 Billion Critique
Updated
Updated · CNN · Jun 22
US Signs 14-Point Iran MOU, Offering Billions in Relief as Trump Reverses $150 Billion Critique
3 articles · Updated · CNN · Jun 22
Summary
A 14-point memorandum signed and released by the White House commits the US to make Iran’s frozen assets available, terminate sanctions and immediately issue waivers for Iranian oil sales.
The administration says any money movement will be performance-based and argues the deal differs from the 2015 nuclear accord because US military action has degraded Iran and improved enforcement leverage.
Republican concern surfaced quickly: Senate Armed Services Chairman Roger Wicker said the MOU could negotiate away wartime gains and warned a proposed $300 billion reconstruction fund would dwarf the JCPOA’s incentives; the administration says the US will not pay into it.
The agreement marks a sharp break from Trump, Marco Rubio and JD Vance’s long-running attacks on sanctions relief and frozen-funds releases, including Trump’s repeated denunciations of Obama’s deal as a $150 billion windfall for a state sponsor of terrorism.
Can billions in financial relief truly steer Iran away from its global terror network after a devastating war?
If key U.S. allies reject the ceasefire, is the new Iran agreement already destined to fail?
With Iran's enriched uranium unmonitored, how does this deal prevent a nuclear breakout?
US-Iran 2026 Memorandum: Truce Terms, $300 Billion Reconstruction, and the Fragile Road to Stability
Overview
On June 14, 2026, Pakistan’s Prime Minister announced a 14-point Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the United States and Iran, marking a major step toward ending their conflict. The official text was released by the U.S. on June 17, with a formal signing set for June 19 in Switzerland. This agreement starts a 60-day window for negotiating a final, UN-endorsed deal. Key terms include stopping hostilities in Lebanon, reopening the Strait of Hormuz, easing sanctions, and mutual respect for sovereignty. The MOU aims to de-escalate tensions and lay the groundwork for lasting peace and economic recovery.