Trump said unfrozen Iranian funds would buy American produce: "corn, soybeans and all of the things they need are going to be bought from our farmers" 1. Iran's parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf confirmed agreement to release $12 billion in frozen assets, narrowing the figure from the $24 billion in an unverified Mehr News draft . Frozen assets are Iranian funds held abroad and blocked by sanctions; releasing them would give Tehran cash it cannot currently touch.
Naming corn and soybeans is the same domestic-sell device Trump used on China trade: convert a foreign concession into a measurable benefit for a swing constituency. The farm-state framing turns sanctions relief into an export-market story for the Republican heartland, building political durability for the deal.
No OFAC instrument releases the $12 billion, and General License X covers oil alone 2, so the asset half exists only as Ghalibaf's word. Trump sells it to farm states as money already on its way home, while the document that would free it does not exist.
