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Iran has presented new stipulations for any conclusive deal with the United States, making it clear that its stockpile of enriched uranium must be processed within Iran instead of being sent overseas. The Iranian Foreign Minister stated that comprehensive nuclear discussions cannot advance until all aspects of the interim deal are met, which includes the removal of the US maritime blockade and cessation of hostilities. US intelligence suggests that Iran possesses approximately 440 kilograms of highly enriched uranium. The contention also involves control over the Strait of Hormuz, an essential route for global oil transportation. The upcoming weeks may be crucial in determining whether the current arrangement transforms into a sustainable peace agreement.

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00:00For the first time in decades, Iran has committed in writing to never build a nuclear weapon.
00:05The framework agreement announced between the United States and Iran
00:09includes a key provision reaffirming that pledge.
00:12Unlike the 2015 nuclear deal, this agreement seeks a stronger commitment from Tehran
00:18following months of conflict.
00:20The agreement now moves into a critical next phase focused on inspections, monitoring, and verification.
00:27For the United States, the stakes are enormous.
00:30A nuclear-armed Iran could reshape security across the Middle East.
00:35It could threaten key American allies, including Israel,
00:38and increase risks to U.S. troops and military bases in the region.
00:43Negotiators now have 60 days to determine whether the promises made on paper can be enforced in practice.
00:49President Trump's deal has, for now, placed a ceiling on Iran's nuclear ambitions.
00:54The next 60 days will determine whether that ceiling holds.
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