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The Trump administration proposed a 15-point plan delivered by Pakistan that highlighted conditions to Iran for the U.S. to end its war against the country.
In a speech at the White House on Tuesday, U.S. President Donald Trump stated that the U.S. is currently conducting negotiations with Iran, and that “they want a deal very badly.” Iran had denied that any talks or backchannel communications were occurring.
Trump claimed that Iran is now speaking rationally and agreed to never possess a nuclear weapon.
A report from Israel’s Channel 12 outlined 14 of the 15 points in Trump’s plan, and it said that the conditions cover most of the U.S. and Israel’s primary war goals.
U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff and U.S. senior advisor Jared Kushner formulated the document with the goal of a month-long ceasefire during which the U.S. and Iran would work towards the implementation of the 15 point agreement.
A western source passed the following proposal to Iranian officials:
- Dismantle existing nuclear capabilities that have already been accumulated
- A commitment that Iran will never pursue nuclear weapons
- No material will be enriched on Iranian soil
- All enriched material will be delivered to Saba on a schedule to be determined by the parties
- Natanz, Isfahan and Fordow will be decommissioned - destroyed
- The Atomic Energy Agency will be exposed to all information within Iran's borders.
- Iran will abandon the proxy paradigm
- Stop actually funding and arming the proxies in the region
- The Strait of Hormuz will remain open, will be a free maritime zone - and no one will block it
- On ballistic missiles a decision will be made later, but Iran will have to limit the number and range
- Further use: For self-defense purposes only
- Lift all sanctions on Iran
- Will assist them in promoting and developing a civil nuclear project in Bushehr (electricity generation)
- The snapback threat will be removed.
This plan was based on points discussed during nuclear talks in May 2025 and adapted to the current conditions.
Senior U.S. officials have yet to speak publicly on the 15-point plan.
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