Iran says draft US deal includes oil sanctions waiver, nuclear limits, asset release
AI Summary
President Trump announced that a U.S.-Iran peace agreement will be signed on June 14, reopening the Strait of Hormuz that Iran had blocked for shipping. Pakistan's Prime Minister confirmed both sides had agreed on a foundational framework for the accord. The U.S. administration plans to coordinate with G7 allies on demining operations to restore navigation through the critical waterway, though Iran publicly expressed doubt about the announced timeline.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets emphasize the momentum and imminent likelihood of the deal, focusing on accelerating timelines and building confidence that the agreement will be finalized, while minimizing reported skepticism about whether the signing will occur as scheduled.
Moderate: Centrist outlets balance coverage of U.S. optimism about the deal timeline with reporting of Iran's publicly expressed doubts, while concentrating on the practical implementation details such as G7 coordination on demining the waterway.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets emphasize Iran's public skepticism about the timing and report Trump's announcement more straightforwardly, with less emphasis on momentum or assertions about the deal's likelihood of materializing according to the announced schedule.
DUBAI - A senior Iranian official told Reuters a final draft of the memorandum of understanding with the US covered a range of issues, from Tehran’s nuclear work to reopening the Strait of Hormuz and US waivers on oil sanctions, with a final deal to be discussed in the 60 days following agreement by the two sides. ...
이 뉴스, 독자들은 어떻게 느꼈나요?
첫 반응을 남겨보세요로그인하면 감정 반응에 참여할 수 있어요.