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Iran Conflict 2026
3JUN

Iran delivers 14-point ceasefire text via Pakistan

3 min read
09:04UTC

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi handed Islamabad a written 14-point ceasefire proposal on 1 May, with a 30-day deadline, war reparations and an end to the fighting in Lebanon among the conditions.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran's fourth written text fixes Lebanon as a clause in the Tehran negotiation with a 30-day clock attached.

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi delivered a written 14-point ceasefire proposal to Pakistan for onward transmission to Washington on Friday 1 May 1. Pakistan has been the documented mediation channel for US-Iran exchanges since the opening weeks of the war; the new text advances the fourth-text framework already delivered through the same conduit . Where the earlier two-phase and three-phase proposals were sequenced negotiating sketches, the 14-point document is structured as a single ceasefire instrument with a 30-day deadline.

Tehran demands lifting of the CENTCOM naval blockade, release of Iranian foreign-currency reserves frozen under US sanctions, payment of war reparations, US withdrawal from Iran's periphery, an end to the fighting in Lebanon, and a new transit-governance mechanism for the Strait of Hormuz, the 33-kilometre chokepoint at the mouth of the Persian Gulf through which roughly a fifth of global oil shipments pass. The Hormuz clause asks Washington to negotiate around the IRGC's informal toll mechanism rather than dismantle it.

'An end to the fighting in Lebanon' inside the Iranian text is the document's most consequential structural move. Washington has treated the Lebanon war as a parallel theatre handled through its monitoring track in Beirut. Tehran has now pulled it inside the Iran negotiation as a deliverable. That linkage means any 30-day Iranian timeline now requires Israeli operational restraint in southern Lebanon to count as compliance. The Pakistani channel becomes the evidentiary trail for whether the demand is met; if the channel falters, both sides lose their record of what was offered and what was refused.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran's foreign minister sent a detailed, 14-item peace proposal to the United States through Pakistan on 1 May. Think of it as a formal written demand list rather than a casual offer. Iran wants a ceasefire within 30 days, an end to the US naval blockade that is stopping Iranian ships, compensation for war damage, release of Iranian funds frozen abroad, US military bases pulled back from Iran's neighbourhood, an end to fighting in Lebanon, and a new agreed rulebook for who controls the Strait of Hormuz. The US has not yet produced any written reply.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's civilian government, specifically Foreign Minister Araghchi, faces a structural problem: it negotiates in writing while the IRGC negotiates by fact on the water. Every written text Tehran submits that the US rejects strengthens the IRGC's argument that diplomacy cannot secure Iran's minimum demands.

The 14-point text is therefore as much an internal Iranian instrument as an external one: it commits the IRGC leadership to a written set of terms they cannot later deny, while giving Araghchi documented proof he pursued a diplomatic route.

The inclusion of war reparations and frozen-asset release reflects Iran's economic position: with OFAC GL-V wind-downs imminent and Chinese refineries under simultaneous legal pressure, Tehran needs dollar-denominated asset access to fund reconstruction whether or not the war ends. The 14-point text packages economic demands inside a diplomatic instrument to give them ceasefire legitimacy.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Pakistan's role as text-carrier gives Islamabad formal status in any eventual ceasefire architecture; a US refusal to engage in writing leaves Pakistan holding an unanswered diplomatic instrument with no procedural mechanism to close the gap.

    Short term · 0.8
  • Risk

    The Lebanon clause (end to fighting in Lebanon as a condition) structurally links the Iran ceasefire timeline to IDF operational tempo in southern Lebanon; Israeli escalation in Lebanon directly undermines Iran's stated terms.

    Short term · 0.85
  • Opportunity

    The 14-point written format, unlike earlier verbal signals, gives negotiators on both sides a reference document from which individual points can be quietly dropped in back-channel exchanges without requiring public admission of movement.

    Medium term · 0.6
First Reported In

Update #87 · China blocks OFAC; Iran writes; Trump tweets

NPR· 3 May 2026
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Different Perspectives
Lloyd's of London underwriters
Lloyd's of London underwriters
Lloyd's held its Hormuz war-risk rate at $10-14 million per voyage; underwriters need a UN Security Council resolution or formal PGSA de-listing before repricing, not a Senate testimony. The PGSA remains on the SDN list under EO 13224, so any vessel transiting a nominally reopened strait still deals with a sanctioned counterparty.
Saudi Arabia and Gulf states
Saudi Arabia and Gulf states
Brent crude at $95-97 on 2-3 June reflects Gulf producers benefiting from the conflict premium; a genuine Hormuz deal would likely cut that premium by $10-15 per barrel. Riyadh's $87 per barrel budget breakeven means the current price is comfortable, reducing the Gulf's urgency to push for a rapid settlement.
China
China
OFAC's Nobitex designation leaves China's informal bilateral currency-swap lines with Iran as the CBI's remaining rial-defence mechanism; Chinese financial institutions face secondary-sanctions risk if they interact with successor wallets. Beijing's MOFCOM Blocking Rules protect mainland refineries from direct designation but do not shield informal swap-line counterparties.
Lebanon / Hezbollah
Lebanon / Hezbollah
Lebanon's Washington delegation demanded full Israeli withdrawal and the return of 1.2 million displaced; Hezbollah deployed an FPV drone that killed an Israeli soldier at Yohmor while talks ran, demonstrating it can impose costs even at Israel's deepest penetration point. Lebanon's government cannot deliver the Hezbollah disarmament guarantee Israel demands.
Israel / Benjamin Netanyahu
Israel / Benjamin Netanyahu
Israeli forces seized Beaufort Castle above the Litani on 1-2 June and advanced to within 10 km of the Zaharani river while ceasefire delegations sat in Washington; the advance ran entirely outside the Beirut-only truce Netanyahu accepted on 1 June. Each kilometre taken raises Israel's withdrawal price before any permanent text is signed.
Iran: Foreign Ministry and domestic population
Iran: Foreign Ministry and domestic population
Araghchi rang six capitals in 48 hours to reopen talks the SNSC had suspended, calling the IRGC line 'speculation'; at home, 37 political prisoners were executed since 19 March while students marched in Tehran, Mashhad and Hamadan. The diplomatic thaw has not eased the state's wartime repression tempo.