- Iran has presented an updated multi-point proposal aimed at resolving disputes with the U.S., but the White House has dismissed the offer as lacking substantive changes.\n- The proposal reportedly focuses on reopening shipping in the Strait of Hormuz and sanctions relief, while deferring nuclear negotiations.\n- Diplomacy continues through intermediaries, with no immediate breakthrough expected as both sides remain far apart on core demands.\n Iran has submitted a revised proposal to the United States via intermediaries, marking the latest attempt to de-escalate tensions that have disrupted shipping in the Persian Gulf and raised global energy market risks. However, according to people familiar with the matter, the White House has characterized the update as not meaningfully addressing key U.S. demands, casting doubt on near-term progress.
The proposal, described by Iranian officials as a 14-point plan, includes calls for ending hostilities, reopening the Strait of Hormuz to commercial traffic, and lifting or easing sanctions. It also suggests postponing detailed negotiations on Iran's nuclear program to later stages, a structure that U.S. officials have previously rejected. President Trump has publicly expressed skepticism, with one administration official stating, "This is not a serious offer."
International mediators continue to shuttle between the two sides, redrafting language and exchanging amendments. A European diplomat involved in the talks said, "We are trying to bridge the gap, but the positions remain deeply entrenched." Attempts to reach the White House for comment on ongoing negotiations were unsuccessful.
The stalemate has direct implications for global oil markets, with benchmark Brent crude trading near $90 per barrel amid elevated risk premiums tied to potential supply disruptions in the Gulf. A deal that lifts sanctions and secures shipping lanes could quickly ease these pressures, while a breakdown risks prolonging instability.
Analysts remain cautious. "The pattern of proposal and rejection is familiar," said a regional risk consultant. "Without meaningful compromise on the core issues of nuclear activity and sanctions, this is likely just another round of positioning."
- Correction: An earlier version of this article misstated the number of points in Iran's proposal as 14, based on preliminary reports. The exact number has not been confirmed by official sources.