Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced on Sunday that The US has delivered its response to Tehran’s latest 14-point proposal to end the war conflict. According to the Fars news agency, ministry spokesman Esmáil Bagháí said that Iran is analyzing this response in detail. He added that the plan does not include nuclear issues or the issue of uranium enrichment. The DPA agency informed about it.
- Iran has accepted America’s response to its latest fourteen-point peace plan.
- Tehran handed over a peace plan to Pakistan, which is brokering talks with America.
- The plan calls for the withdrawal of US troops, the lifting of blockades and the release of Iranian finances.
- Donald Trump has publicly indicated his reluctance to accept the Iranian proposal as a sufficient compromise.
- Peace negotiations have stalled due to the US naval blockade and Iran’s closure of Hormuz.
Iran’s IRNA news agency reported on Friday, without further details, that on Thursday night Tehran handed over its latest 14-point plan to end the war to Pakistan, which is acting as a mediator in talks with the United States. The move came after failed attempts at consensus, with both sides repeatedly rejecting each other’s ceasefire proposals.
US President Donald Trump said on Friday that he was “not happy” with what Iran was offering at the moment. A day later, he wrote on his Truth Social platform that he would soon review Iran’s latest peace proposal, but that he could not imagine it would be acceptable, as Tehran “has not yet paid a high enough price for what they have done to humanity and the world in the last 47 years”.
Iranian media reported that Tehran’s proposal contains 14 points, among which is withdrawal of US troops from the region, lifting of blockades, release of frozen Iranian finances, payment of compensations, lifting of sanctions and termination of the conflict on several fronts, including Lebanon, as well as a new control mechanism for the Strait of Hormuz. Talks on Iran’s nuclear program would be postponed.
The war in the Middle East broke out on February 28 with the launch of US-Israeli attacks on Iran. In retaliation, Tehran began attacking other countries in the region. The conflict was suspended on April 8 by an agreed ceasefire. However, delegations from both sides have completed only one round of negotiations on a more permanent peace in Islamabad so far. The talks stalled after the United States imposed a naval blockade on Iranian ports while Iran kept the Strait of Hormuz largely closed.