Qatar's Foreign Ministry said on 3 July that the $6bn tranche of Iranian funds it holds remains frozen, directly contradicting President Masoud Pezeshkian, who claimed on 29 June that the money was returning to Tehran without US conditions 1. Any release depends on a US-Qatar-Iran mechanism, restricted to food and medicine, that has not been finalised.
The escrow unlocks only against approved humanitarian invoices, so even a signed deal would not put cash in Tehran's hands. It would let Iran draw down against wheat and medicine purchases run through a US-supervised account. Pezeshkian described a return of sovereign money; Doha described a spending line for food.
The account mirrors a 2023 arrangement in which $6bn of Iranian oil money sat in Qatar for humanitarian purchases before being refrozen, and the same food-and-medicine ringfence Washington set on the disputed $12bn tranche last week . Same custodian, same ledger, same reversibility. A president announcing a return of funds structured this way is describing an invoice line, not a transfer, which is the distinction Doha's rebuttal makes public. Pezeshkian's announcement is the second Iranian claim of a win this week that the paperwork does not support.
