Consensus view: Foundation for Defense of Democracies analysts Mark Dubowitz and Richard Goldberg assessed Pezeshkian's framing as consistent with Iran's established pattern of publicly reinterpreting conditional US offers as unconditional concessions, a technique used throughout the JCPOA era to lock in domestic audiences on favourable terms before any deal is finalised.
Washington's non-confirmation leaves Iran free to claim a concession it has not actually received, building domestic political capital in advance of a deal whose conditionality it has publicly rejected.
Counter-view: Researchers at the National Iranian American Council (NIAC) argued the $6 billion figure, being precisely half of Bessent's $12 billion escrow, may reflect an interim proposal Iran raised in the Doha shuttle rather than pure domestic framing: the halving matches Iran's longstanding position that the original agreement involved a two-tranche release without end-use conditions .
Whether Washington has privately acknowledged a partial unconditional release is exactly what its public non-confirmation leaves open, and NIAC noted that the gap between Pezeshkian's framing and Bessent's structure may be smaller in the back-channel than in the public positions.
Key tension: Whether Pezeshkian's $6 billion figure reflects Iran's interpretation of what was already agreed, a new interim proposal floated in Doha, or domestic framing of an asset release that does not yet exist.