Trump Says He’ll Sign Deal With Iran to Reopen Hormuz Sunday


(Bloomberg) — President Donald Trump said an interim deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and end the conflict with Iran would be signed on Sunday, a claim contradicted by Iran as the two sides still differ over key points, including management of the waterway and payments to the Islamic Republic.

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“The Deal is scheduled to get signed tomorrow, and immediately after it is signed, the Hormuz Strait is OPEN TO ALL,” Trump said in a social media post on Saturday, while claiming that Iran “no longer wants a Nuclear weapon.”

Pakistan, which has served as a mediator, is preparing for an electronic signing of the peace deal, “followed by technical-level talks next week,” Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said. Those talks would last up to 60 days and focus on Iran’s nuclear program.

Trump said Iran would not get any money in the deal, while Tehran was still insisting that it be paid for damage from the war and be able to reclaim its own assets that were frozen by the US after the 1979 revolution.

Trump said that when other components of the deal were settled, the US would “go in and get the Nuclear Dust,” his term for highly enriched uranium, and would destroy it either in Iran or the US.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi echoed Trump’s expectations for a signing in a speech carried by state television on Friday, but a spokesman ruled out a signing on Sunday, according to state-run IRIB news. The terms of the accord still need to be approved by Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, according to a European official familiar with the matter.

Trump has vowed dozens of times that an agreement to end the war that began in February is near, only for none to materialize so far. The primary US objectives are to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to maritime traffic, and curb Iran’s nuclear program. Iran insists on retaining a degree of control over the waterway and gaining immediate access to its frozen funds.

The US expects the deal will ensure Iran doesn’t have a nuclear weapons program but would let it maintain a civilian nuclear energy program, a senior American official said. It would also ensure enriched nuclear material is removed from the country and end both sides’ blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. If all terms are met, the US would ease sanctions on Iran and allow it to reintegrate into the global economy, according to the official.

Some Iranian hard-liners still want to kill any breakthrough, the official said, and some of Trump’s hawkish allies in the Republican Party are also skeptical of a deal.

Araghchi said Iran’s sovereignty over the strait would be maintained under the proposed deal, adding the regime governing Hormuz would differ from the past, when Tehran provided management services free of charge.

Bringing a conclusive end to the conflict, now in its fourth month, has thrust Trump into a complicated political bind: He wants to present the deal as a win to national security hawks in his own party as well as to an American public that has increasingly turned against the war he started with a joint US-Israeli bombardment of the Islamic Republic on Feb. 28. The war has killed thousands of people across the region, mainly in Iran and Lebanon.

Step By Step

A central element of Trump’s emerging Iran deal is a step-by-step approach that would see the Strait of Hormuz reopened followed by Tehran getting economic rewards each time it meets US demands.

That sequencing formalizes a cautious approach designed to prevent the White House from getting caught out as it tries to end the war. But it also means there will be many opportunities for the deal to fall apart.

“Any deal that kicks the can down the road on the most critical issues and is conditions-based would put the US and Iran exactly where they’ve been: a fragile ceasefire in name only that is routinely tested and prone to violence,” said Becca Wasser, defense lead for Bloomberg Economics.

A person familiar with the deliberations, who asked not to be named while discussing sensitive matters, said the memorandum would be open to interpretation in certain areas, including what the reopening of Hormuz would mean in practice.

Another diplomat familiar with the talks said the US and its allies would aim to ensure normal levels of shipments through the strait within about a month of a signing. That may be complicated by the high likelihood of Iran having placed mines in the strait.

A senior US administration official told reporters Saturday that if a deal is signed, the UK and France would build a coalition to remove Iranian mines that the US says endanger shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

While at a meeting of the Group of Seven nations in France next week, Trump will also meet on the sidelines with the leaders of Egypt, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

Roughly 140 ships passed through the narrow chokepoint each day before the conflict erupted. The number of vessels has crept up in recent weeks, but is still far below pre-conflict levels.

On Saturday, the UK Navy said a vessel was struck by an unknown projectile off the Oman coast.

Despite continuing uncertainty, energy prices continued to fall on Friday following Trump’s announcement a day earlier that he had canceled plans for new strikes on Iran.

Brent futures fell Friday as much as 5.1% to trade at the lowest level since the early days of the war, while European gas slumped as much as 8.4%. While the global benchmark is still up almost 50% this year, it’s fallen from a high of $125 in late April.

Another potential sticking point is Israel, which is not part of the negotiations for the interim deal. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has indicated he’d prefer more strikes to further degrade Iran’s military.

Israel’s minimum expectation is now that an end-of-war accord ensures highly enriched uranium is removed from Iran, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Araghchi said Israel was an “enemy” of the proposed deal with the US and that it was seeking to disrupt it.

The senior administration official suggested that this time was different. US diplomatic efforts have been an all-hands-on-deck process over the past 24 hours involving officials including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, the senior US official said.

–With assistance from Eric Martin, Josh Wingrove, Dan Williams, Salma El Wardany and Hadriana Lowenkron.

(Adds background, details beginning in fourth paragraph.)

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