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T20
T20

Washington and Tehran negotiate terms for historic truce ahead of Swiss summit

Negotiators have organised a fourteen-point draft framework to end the maritime conflict between Washington and Tehran. The proposed terms require the removal of the American naval blockade and the gradual return of billions in frozen financial assets
Published By : Satya Mohapatra | June 15, 2026 12:21 PM
Washington and Tehran negotiate terms for historic truce ahead of Swiss summit

Washington and Tehran negotiate critical truce terms

Diplomatic channels have verified a draft text of a potential bilateral agreement between Washington and Tehran, setting up a 60-day window to halt military operations across West Asia. Iranian state media published the specific components of the document, which local intermediaries delivered to American representatives. While Washington initially expressed public hesitation regarding the specific timelines, parallel negotiations handled by Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif have successfully preserved the diplomatic path, directing both sides toward a formal signing gathering scheduled for this Friday in Switzerland. US President Donald Trump confirmed that initial progress has already allowed early security measures, including a temporary pause in the active naval blockade restricting commercial transport lanes.

Draft Architecture of the Peace Plan

The leaked framework published by the Mehr News Agency outlines a series of structural steps designed to wind down the maritime conflict. Analysts note that these measures require simultaneous execution from both military forces to prevent a return to active combat.

· Establishing a permanent and binding ceasefire across all operational fronts, including active combat zones in southern Lebanon.

· Securing a formal commitment from Washington to refrain from interfering in domestic political governance inside Iran.

· Removing the active United States naval blockade on domestic shipping hubs within a strict 30-day window.

· Withdrawing specialised American military personnel from deployment zones directly adjacent to Iranian territory.

· Reopening commercial channels through the Strait of Hormuz under organised local maritime management within 30 days.

· Requesting Western coalition members to submit infrastructure reconstruction strategies valued at three hundred billion dollars.

· Suspending economic restrictions targeting regional petrochemical exports, oil logistics, and associated energy revenues.

· Reaffirming state obligations under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty to prevent the creation of atomic weaponry.

· Pledging that the United States will not deploy extra military divisions to the region during active talks.

· Halting the introduction of any new economic sanctions by the American administration during the negotiation period.

· Structuring the phased release of twenty-four billion dollars in frozen Iranian financial assets during the 60-day timeframe.

· Ensuring at least half of the blocked state funds become accessible before the first session of formal baseline talks.

· Refraining from imposing special transit fees or collection tariffs on international vessels utilising the shipping corridor.

· Submitting the finalised peace agreement to the United Nations Security Council for formal legal validation.

Verification Obstacles and Nuclear Security

Significant operational differences still complicate the final implementation of these terms. American representatives state that financial access remains strictly performance-based, meaning no blocked capital moves until international inspectors verify nuclear enrichment limits. Western delegates continue to demand that Tehran dismantle its advanced centrifuges and transfer its highly enriched material out of the country. Iranian negotiators maintain that processing radioactive material must happen domestically to protect sovereign industrial rights, creating a difficult environment for the upcoming Swiss summit.