Iran and the United States have signed a Memorandum of Understanding in Islamabad declaring an immediate and permanent end to military operations and setting a 60-day timetable to negotiate a final deal, according to the text of the agreement.
The document, mediated and witnessed by Pakistan, was signed on 28 Khordad (June 18) by representatives of both governments. It commits the two sides and their allies to halt all military operations, including in Lebanon, and to refrain from the threat or use of force against each other.
Under paragraph four, the US will begin removing its naval blockade immediately on signing and fully end it within 30 days, with vessel traffic restored in proportion to pre-war levels during that period. Washington also undertakes to withdraw its forces from Iran's vicinity within 30 days of the final deal.
Iran, for its part, pledged best efforts to ensure the safe passage of commercial vessels between the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman, free of charge for 60 days, and to clear technical and military obstacles, including de-mining, within 30 days. Tehran said it would hold talks with Oman and other Gulf littoral states on the future administration of the Strait of Hormuz.
On reconstruction, the US committed with regional partners to develop a plan worth at least $300bn for Iran's economic development, with the implementation mechanism to be finalised in the final deal within 60 days.
The agreement obliges Washington to terminate all sanctions against Iran, including UN Security Council and unilateral primary and secondary measures, on an agreed schedule as part of the final deal. Pending that, the US Treasury will issue waivers for exports of Iranian crude oil, petroleum products and derivatives, along with associated banking, insurance and transport services. Frozen Iranian funds and assets are to be made fully available on implementation.
Iran reaffirmed it would not procure or develop nuclear weapons. The two sides agreed to resolve the disposition of stockpiled enriched material through a mutually agreed mechanism, with down-blending on-site under International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) supervision, and to discuss enrichment and Iran's nuclear needs in the final deal. Both committed to maintaining the status quo pending that deal, with Iran freezing its nuclear programme and the US imposing no new sanctions or additional regional deployments.
The final deal is to be endorsed by a binding UN Security Council resolution. An executive mechanism will monitor implementation.
Financial markets greeted the broader détente with relief, ING said in a research note on June 18, though the Dutch bank cautioned that the return of shipping through Hormuz would be gradual, requiring mine clearance, insurance pricing and the loading of vessels over several months. Oil prices have already fallen, easing inflation fears. ING expects a prolonged Federal Reserve pause, a second European Central Bank hike this summer and a Bank of England hold, with UK rate cuts not seen until 2027.
The Islamabad MoU sets out 14 numbered provisions:
The document was signed on behalf of the governments of Iran and the United States, and witnessed by the government of Pakistan as mediator.
A US-Iran memorandum has reopened the Strait of Hormuz after 108 days, but structural damage to energy markets, insurance and tanker routes will persist well beyond the diplomatic announcement ... more
HSBC's annual GCC Stock Exchanges Conference in London drew its largest attendance in the event's five-year history this week, Akhbar Al Khaleej ... more
State-run Pakistan LNG Limited (PLL) has bought three cargoes on the spot market for the first time in over two years, local media Dawn reported on April 23. The cargoes of the super-chilled fuel ... more