Negotiators from Washington and Tehran in Iran are closer to a preliminary agreement than at any point since the Gulf war began, according to U.S. officials and sources familiar with the ongoing mediation. Nothing has been signed. But the shape of a possible deal is becoming clearer, and the momentum, however fragile, appears real.
At the center of the talks is a one-page, 14-point memorandum of understanding that would formally declare an end to hostilities and open a 30-day window for negotiating the harder issues: Iran’s nuclear program, U.S. sanctions, frozen Iranian assets and the future of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.
How the Iran talks reached this point
Pakistan has served as the primary go-between throughout the conflict, and it was Pakistani mediators who conveyed encouraging signals to the White House this week. Two U.S. administration officials said those messages helped push President Donald Trump to pause “Project Freedom,” a naval operation aimed at guiding stranded ships out of the Strait of Hormuz. The decision, officials said, was a direct response to progress in the talks.
Sources familiar with the negotiations say Trump’s team has worked to simplify the terms on the table, giving moderate figures within Iran’s government more room to engage without immediately alienating hardliners. The strategy appears to be sequencing: agree on a framework now, resolve the difficult details later.
Iran’s foreign ministry acknowledged it had received a U.S. proposal and said it would send a response through Pakistan soon.
What the deal would actually require
The memorandum, as currently drafted, would require significant concessions from both sides.
Iran would commit to a moratorium on uranium enrichment. Washington initially sought a 20-year freeze. Tehran proposed five. The gap has narrowed considerably, with sources pointing to a range of 12 to 15 years as the likely landing point. Under one provision being discussed, any Iranian violation would automatically extend the moratorium period.
Iran would also commit to never pursuing a nuclear weapon, to never operating underground nuclear facilities and to submitting to an enhanced inspection regime that includes snap visits by UN monitors. One of the more striking elements under negotiation: Iran would agree to remove its stockpile of highly enriched uranium from the country entirely. One source said an option being floated involves shipping the material to the United States.
In return, Washington would agree to a phased lifting of sanctions and the gradual release of billions of dollars in Iranian funds currently frozen around the world. Restrictions on Strait of Hormuz transit would ease incrementally over the 30-day negotiation window, with the naval blockade lifted in tandem.
Why the Iran deal could still fall apart
The White House is not declaring victory. Officials remain wary that Iran’s leadership is divided, with hardliners who have little interest in compromise gaining influence whenever the U.S. pushes aggressively. Sources say the harder Washington leaned into its maritime operations, the louder those voices became inside Tehran.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio captured the administration’s cautious posture this week, noting that a final text did not need to materialize overnight but that any diplomatic path forward required Iran to commit, upfront, to the scope of concessions it was prepared to make. He also used strikingly harsh language to describe several of Iran’s top leaders, a remark that reflected the administration’s frustration with the negotiations even as it pursues them.
Trump, for his part, issued a new warning Today: if Iran does not reach an agreement, strikes would resume at a higher level of intensity than before.
Financial markets responded to the diplomatic signals with notable sensitivity. The dollar fell against most major currencies as investors priced in the possibility of a resolution. The euro and British pound both rose sharply, and the yen strengthened, triggering speculation about intervention.
France’s Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier group crossed the Suez Canal Today and moved into the Red Sea, positioning itself to support freedom of navigation in the strait when and if conditions allow.
The next 48 hours are expected to be critical. U.S. officials say they are waiting on Iran’s response to several key provisions. If Tehran agrees, the two sides could be looking at the closest thing to a ceasefire this war has produced. If the talks collapse, as they have before, the cycle begins again.

