The peace plan for Iran appears to be a U.S.-Iran ceasefire framework built around stopping hostilities, reopening key shipping routes, easing sanctions, and holding follow-up talks on Iran’s nuclear program. A recent reported 14-point memorandum says the sides would pause fighting immediately, protect each other’s sovereignty, restore traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, and negotiate a final agreement within 60 days.

What it includes

  • An immediate and permanent ceasefire.
  • A commitment not to threaten or use force against each other.
  • A 60-day negotiation window for a fuller deal.
  • Restoration of shipping and a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Sanctions relief, including permission for Iranian oil exports and access to frozen funds.
  • A pledge by Iran not to pursue nuclear weapons.
  • A monitoring mechanism and eventual UN Security Council approval for the final deal.

Why it matters

The reported plan is less a finished peace treaty than a roadmap for de- escalation, with the hardest issues pushed into later talks. CNN said the framework leaves major details unresolved, especially around nuclear terms, while offering Iran substantial economic upside if it complies. Other reports say mediators from Qatar and Pakistan helped refine the proposal, and talks in late June were described as making ā€œencouraging progressā€.

Current status

This is still a developing diplomatic effort, not a settled final peace accord. Reports in late May and June said both sides had exchanged revisions and that the U.S. and Iran were still arguing over sanctions relief, nuclear constraints, and the Strait of Hormuz. If you want, I can turn this into a simple point-by-point breakdown of the 14 points.