Fourteen-article MOU sets 30-day Hormuz deadline and excludes Iran missile program
The MOU detail is more market-moving than the headline agreement. Oil sanctions suspended on Iranian crude and petrochemical sales is an immediate supply-side overhang: Iranian barrels re-entering the market within weeks will pressure Brent and WTI, compounding the Hormuz reopening signal. The 30-day timeline on both the blockade lift and strait reopening gives traders a hard horizon to price against. The $300 billion reconstruction demand from the U.S. and allies is a significant political ask that introduces negotiating friction into the 60-day follow-on talks; whether Washington accepts that framing will be a key watch. The exclusion of Iran’s missile program and support for regional proxy groups from the final talks is a major concession to Tehran and will raise questions in Washington and Tel Aviv about the deal’s strategic value beyond the immediate ceasefire.
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Iran’s Mehr published the 14-article draft MOU: Hormuz reopens in 30 days, oil sanctions suspended, $24bn unfrozen, missiles excluded from talks, $300bn reconstruction demanded. (177 chars)
Summary:
Source: Iran’s Mehr News Agency
- The 14-article draft MOU calls for an immediate, permanent halt to hostilities on all fronts including Lebanon
- The U.S. naval blockade lifts completely within 30 days; the Strait of Hormuz reopens within 30 days under Iranian arrangements
- Sanctions on Iranian oil and petrochemical sales are suspended under the draft
- $24 billion in blocked Iranian funds to be released during talks, with half available before final negotiations begin
- The U.S. and allies must present reconstruction plans for Iran worth at least $300 billion
- A 60-day negotiating period covers nuclear issues and full sanctions removal
- Iran’s missile program and support for resistance groups are explicitly excluded from the final talks
Iran’s Mehr News Agency published what it said were the contents of the 14-article draft memorandum of understanding between Tehran and Washington, revealing terms that go considerably further in Iran’s favour than U.S. officials had publicly indicated.
The ceasefire component mirrors what has already been announced: an immediate and permanent halt to military operations on all fronts, Lebanon included. The operational timelines sit at 30 days for both the complete lifting of the U.S. naval blockade and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, the latter to occur under Iranian arrangements in coordination with Oman.
On sanctions, the draft calls for suspension of U.S. measures targeting Iranian oil and petrochemical sales, a direct injection of additional supply capacity into a market already absorbing the Hormuz reopening signal. Of the $24 billion in Iranian funds currently frozen, half must be made accessible before the formal 60-day negotiating period begins, with the remainder released during those talks.
The reconstruction clause will attract scrutiny: the draft requires the U.S. and its allies to present plans to fund Iranian reconstruction to a minimum value of $300 billion. The 60-day talks cover nuclear issues and a pathway to full sanctions removal.
Most significantly, Iran’s missile program and its financial and material support for regional resistance groups are explicitly carved out of the final negotiating agenda. That exclusion hands Tehran continued strategic depth while accepting the ceasefire’s immediate terms.
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This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.