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Israel Hayom reports Iran's 15-year enrichment freeze offer; wires unconfirmed

3 min read
14:27UTC

Israel Hayom reported on 3 May that Iran offered a complete 15-year uranium enrichment freeze in a three-stage framework, with a 3.67% civilian ceiling after the freeze; Reuters, AP, and AFP had not corroborated the figure as of 14 May.

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Key takeaway

Israel Hayom's 15-year freeze figure is single-sourced; treat as reported position until Reuters, AP, or AFP confirms.

Israel Hayom, an Israeli right-leaning daily newspaper, reported on 3 May that Iran offered a complete 15-year uranium enrichment freeze in a three-stage framework: a 3.67% civilian enrichment ceiling after the freeze period, zero stockpiling, and a hard red line against infrastructure dismantlement 1. No Reuters, AP, or AFP corroboration had emerged as of 14 May. Euronews (12 May) referenced only the US-side demand for a 20-year freeze plus high-enriched uranium (HEU) transfer, without reporting an Iranian counter-number 2.

Iran's most recent documented negotiating position is its 10-point MOU reply delivered via Pakistan on 10 May . If the 15-year figure is genuine, it would exceed the US MOU of 7 May's 12-year moratorium and sit between that offer and Washington's 20-year demand, representing Iranian movement on duration. The three-stage framework (nuclear first, then sanctions, then security) matches the sequencing Abbas Araghchi has publicly favoured since the first Islamabad round, lending the report some structural plausibility.

Israel Hayom has proximity to the Netanyahu government; a 15-year offer circulating in Israeli right-leaning media could reflect genuine intelligence, deliberate framing to create domestic Iranian pressure against a concession Tehran has not formally made, or a negotiating trial balloon. All three are possible simultaneously. Major wire services typically pick up confirmed nuclear-file movements within 24-48 hours; Reuters, AP, and AFP had not filed a corroborating report in 11 days.

Iran holds a number in diplomatic circulation that the US side, with zero signed Iran instruments at Day 76, does not. Whether the 15-year offer is genuine or an Israeli framing exercise, Tehran commands the enrichment-duration narrative in the rooms where it is being deployed .

Deep Analysis

In plain English

An Israeli newspaper called Israel Hayom reported on 3 May that Iran offered to freeze its nuclear programme for 15 years, with strict limits on how much uranium it could make. The US wants a 20-year freeze. No other major news agency confirmed the story in the 11 days that followed. Iran has not officially confirmed or denied it. The newspaper is close to Israel's right-wing government, so the report might be genuine intelligence, a political tactic, or both.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's tactical use of media leaks to set negotiating baselines is documented across the nuclear file's history. The 14-point proposal delivered via Pakistan on 1 May contained terms Tehran knew Washington would reject; circulating a more generous enrichment number through an Israeli outlet (rather than through the Pakistan channel) tests Washington's response without committing Iran's formal negotiating position.

The three-stage sequencing (nuclear, sanctions, security) protects Iran's core demand: ending the military strikes before nuclear terms are finalised. If the nuclear offer is credible and Washington responds positively, Iran has moved the conversation toward its preferred sequencing without formally offering anything through the bilateral channel.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    If confirmed, the 15-year figure places Iran between the 12-year US MOU floor and the 20-year US demand, narrowing the enrichment-duration gap to 5 years while leaving HEU transfer and infrastructure dismantlement unresolved.

  • Risk

    If the report is an Israeli intelligence leak rather than a genuine Iranian offer, Washington treating it as genuine would allow Tehran to walk back the position in the formal channel without penalty.

First Reported In

Update #97 · Chips for Beijing, no paper for Iran

Israel Hayom· 14 May 2026
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