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From June 15 to 18, 2026, the U.S. and Iran reached a 14-point agreement that establishes a 60-day ceasefire, the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and the initiation of discussions regarding Iran's nuclear agenda. Despite American airstrikes that took out several sites in June 2025, Iran still possesses about 400 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60%. The agreement does not cover Iran's missile development or its network of proxy groups in the region. Israel has expressed its disapproval of the deal. A set of technical discussions planned for June 18 in Switzerland were unexpectedly delayed. There is considerable ambiguity surrounding the execution of this agreement, especially in terms of sanctions relief and the nuclear issue.
Transcript
00:00The United States and Iran just signed a framework deal that could reshape the Middle East
00:04and directly affect your gas prices and your security.
00:08The 14-point memorandum signed June 18 commits both sides to a 60-day ceasefire,
00:14the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and the start of nuclear negotiations.
00:19But the hard questions remain unanswered.
00:21Iran still holds 400 kilograms of 60% enriched uranium.
00:26Enough for multiple nuclear weapons.
00:29Trump vowed to remove it.
00:30Tehran hasn't agreed.
00:32Iran's ballistic missile program is not covered by the deal.
00:36And Israel, America's closest ally in the region, has publicly opposed the agreement.
00:42Last-minute talks in Switzerland were canceled on June 18 without explanation.
00:46The deal is fragile.
00:48The ceasefire is 60 days.
00:50What happens on Day 61, if no full agreement is reached, is the question that no one has answered.
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