Wed, 17 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jun 17, 2026 · 17:07
World News Updated Jun 17, 2026

US-Iran Peace Deal Imminent: Sanctions Relief, 60-Day Nuclear Talks

A US-Iran memorandum signing ceremony is imminent, set for Friday in Switzerland. The roadmap includes sanctions relief, reopening the Strait of Hormuz, and a 60-day negotiation window on Iran's nuclear program. President Trump has warned the deal is conditional, threatening a return to military action if Iran fails to comply. Vice President JD Vance outlined a strict compliance framework, demanding Iran end proxy networks and nuclear enrichment.

US-Iran signing ceremony imminent: Roadmap details sanctions relief, 60-day nuclear negotiation window

Washington, DC, June 17

Preliminary details are beginning to filter through ahead of the impending US-Iran memorandum signing ceremony, which is now less than 48 hours away, with the peace deal set to be signed on Friday in Switzerland.

The proposed framework encompasses a series of high-stakes diplomatic manoeuvres.

A report broadcast by Fox News detailed that these measures include the reopening of the strategic Strait, the formal termination of the American blockade, and the initiation of a crucial 60-day negotiation period regarding Iran's uranium enrichment activities.

This comprehensive roadmap also integrates substantial sanctions relief alongside a structured ceasefire agreement involving Israel and Hezbollah.

Commenting on these fast-moving diplomatic developments, the Fox News broadcast highlighted that United States President Donald Trump intends to move decisively against Iran's nuclear infrastructure on Tuesday, while simultaneously pointing to the "60-day window for negotiations over Tehran's nuclear ambitions."

Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump has injected a note of severe volatility into the ongoing peace process with Iran. While an agreement in principle has been reached to end months of hostilities and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, the President signalled on Wednesday that the ceasefire remains conditional and precarious.

Speaking during a bilateral meeting with the President of Egypt, Trump underscored that the memorandum of understanding (MoU) currently on the table is not a final, immutable document. He warned that the U.S. remains prepared to pivot back to military action if Tehran fails to adhere to the expectations established in the upcoming formal signing.

When pressed by reporters on the status of the agreement, Trump was explicit about the fragility of the current peace. "It's not final," the President stated. "It's a memorandum of understanding, and if I don't like it, we'll go back to shooting them, dropping bombs on their heads."

The President's remarks underscored a "trust but verify" approach that has defined his administration's latest diplomatic push. "If I don't like it, if they don't behave, we'll go right back to dropping bombs right smack in the middle of their head. Okay? 'Cause they've misbehaved for 47 years," he added.

Concurrently, US Vice President JD Vance detailed the core triple-pillar architecture governing this proposed peace treaty during an interview with Fox News, explaining, "The agreement is actually very simple. One, Iran can't have a nuclear weapon. Two, the Straits of Hormuz are open. And number three, there are all of these benefits contemplated that the Iranians can get if they behave."

To ensure compliance, Vance made it clear that any prospective financial concessions or sanctions relief for Tehran remain entirely contingent upon verifiable and sweeping changes in its state operations, explicitly demanding an end to its sponsorship of proxy networks and the absolute cessation of its nuclear enrichment initiatives.

Reinforcing this strict conditional stance, Vance remarked, "If they stop developing terrorism, if they stop funding terrorism, if they stop supporting the rebuilding of the nuclear arms program, they actually can get some real benefits. If they don't do any of that stuff, they don't get anything."

Furthermore, Vance aimed narratives emerging from Tehran, accusing Iranian authorities of intentionally distorting the actual parameters of the negotiated text, noting, "Iranian propagandists out there [are] saying well we get all these things and they leave out the fact that they only get those things if they fundamentally transform themselves as a country."

This rhetorical pushback highlights that, under this framework, Iran will essentially enter a strict probationary status, with Washington evaluating Tehran entirely on its tangible operational adjustments rather than diplomatic assurances.

Explicitly highlighting this leverage, Vance asserted, "The United States wins either way, as the President said. Either they get nothing, we destroy their nuclear program and the Straits of Hormuz are open, or they fundamentally transform themselves and that's a big win too. It's really up to them."

Emphasising this action-over-words approach, Vance stated, "The thing I've learned from the President of the United States is whether friend or foe, you shouldn't trust anybody, you should trust people's actions," adding, "That's why the way this agreement is built is that if they act in the right way, if they behave in the way, they get a lot of benefits."

As these operational details were laid out on television, US President Donald Trump simultaneously utilised his Truth Social platform to champion the impending diplomatic breakthrough, characterising the document as a 'Great Deal' engineered to institute long-term equilibrium across the Middle East.

"This Great Deal will bring Peace and Security to the whole Region. Many presidents have tried to make Peace with Iran, and all have failed before me. The Leaders of the Region have, for the first time, found a President who can help them achieve real Peace," the US President posted.

Ultimately, the momentum behind this bilateral Washington-Tehran diplomatic framework has gained significant multilateral validation in France, where Group of Seven (G7) heads of state formally expressed their unified support for the evolving pact during their international summit.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Sarah B

Interesting how the US can just flip-flop between diplomacy and threats of military action. Trust but verify? More like threaten then negotiate. I'm skeptical this 60-day window will lead to anything substantial.

Priya S

As an Indian, I see this differently. Strait of Hormuz reopening is good for our oil imports. But Trump's ultimatum style is worrying - koi bhi country is tarah negotiate nahi karti. Iran ko bhi respect chahiye, threats nahi. Let's hope common sense prevails.

Michael C

Vance says "the US wins either way" - that's the kind of arrogance that creates more problems. Peace isn't about winning, it's about stability. This feels more like a punitive probation for Iran than a genuine diplomatic solution.

Vikram M

Honestly, mujhe lagta hai Iran ko apna nuclear program chhodna nahi chahiye. Israel ke paas hai, US ke paas hai, toh Iran ko kyun nahi? Lekin Strait of Hormuz band rehna bhi sahi nahi. Bahut complicated situation hai. Let's see kya hota hai.

Ananya R

Trump's language is very concerning. "Dropping bombs on their heads" is not how world leaders should talk. But credit where due - at least he's trying for peace when others have failed. Let's see if the MoU holds or if it's just another chapter in US-Iran tensions.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked