Iranian media reports details of 14-point draft Iran-US agreement framework
Listen to this story:
0:00
Note: AI technology was used to generate this article’s audio.
Published :
2 hours ago|- A 14-point draft memorandum of understanding between ‘Iran’ and the ‘United States’ has been reported by MEHER News, based on a source close to Iranian negotiators.
- The draft outlines major provisions including sanctions relief, security guarantees, and a structured nuclear negotiation timeline.
Iranian media, citing a source close to the Iranian negotiating team, has reported new details of a 14-point draft memorandum of understanding between ‘Iran’ and the ‘United States’.
The draft, described as the most detailed public outline so far, remains under internal review by Iranian authorities and has not been formally approved.
Key provisions in draft agreement:
- Permanent and immediate end to hostilities across all fronts, including Lebanon.
- US commitment to non-interference in Iran’s internal affairs and respect for sovereignty.
- Complete lifting of the naval blockade within 30 days.
- US commitment to withdraw forces deployed around ‘Iran’.
- Reopening of the Strait of Hormuz within 30 days under Iranian arrangements.
- Suspension of sanctions on oil and petrochemical exports and derivatives.
- Full access for Iran to its frozen financial assets.
- Reconstruction plan valued at a minimum of $300 billion to be presented by the US and allies.
- A 60-day negotiation period to reach a final nuclear agreement.
- Commitment to remove US sanctions and related UN and IAEA resolutions.
- Reaffirmation of Iran’s obligations under the Non-Proliferation Treaty not to pursue nuclear weapons.
- US pledge not to increase regional military presence or impose new sanctions during talks.
- Release of $24 billion in frozen Iranian funds during negotiations, with part released upfront.
- Establishment of a monitoring mechanism to oversee implementation.
- Final agreement to be ratified by a UN Security Council resolution.
The draft reportedly limits final negotiations to nuclear enrichment, sanctions relief, and economic reconstruction. It excludes discussion of Iran’s missile programme and its support for regional allied groups.



