US and Iran agree to deal halting war that shook Middle East
The U.S. and Iran said they reached an interim agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, halting a war that killed thousands of people and setting the stage for 60 days of negotiations on the fate of the country's nuclear program.
Officials from the two countries will meet in Switzerland on June 19 to formally sign the agreement, a decision that suggests aspects of the deal may still remain unresolved. Indeed, no text has yet been released by either side, leaving the biggest sticking points for the next stage of talks.
But Trump on Saturday had promised an agreement would be signed on Sunday - his 80th birthday - and he had pushed hard for it to go ahead.
"This Great Deal will bring Peace and Security to the whole Region," Trump said in a post on social media. He said the delay was "for the purposes of mine removal" from the strait, which would open once the agreement is signed.
Hundreds of ships have been trapped on either side of the vital waterway, roiling the global energy market.
The announcement came first from Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, and was followed by Trump and Iranian state media, which depicted the deal as a capitulation by the U.S. Iranian officials said the text would be published after the agreement is signed.
"Iran officially forced the U.S.-Israeli enemy to end the war on all fronts," Iranian state television said. The two sides agreed not to attack each other and Iran will apparently get relief from sanctions targeting its overseas oil sales.
Oil dropped after the news, even as details of the deal remain unresolved. Brent fell more than 4% toward $83 a barrel, after closing last week at the lowest in more than three months. The dollar slipped against its Group-of-10 peers in early Asia trading with the risk-sensitive Aussie leading gains.
"This is still a move of optimism, not certainty," said Josh Gilbert, lead analyst for Asia Pacific and the Middle East at eToro Ltd. "The nerves won't fully settle until the deal is signed, meaning investors should still err on the side of caution."
A deal will help dispel fears of an immediate return to a conflict that wreaked havoc on global energy markets and raised risks of an inflationary wave. It will also ease some of the political pressure Trump will face ahead of midterm elections in November. Polling shows the war is deeply unpopular among Americans.
Even as he celebrated the deal, Trump told the New York Times in an interview Sunday that if a deal isn't reached with Iran on a nuclear deal, he could restart military attacks on Tehran.
Both sides were already casting the deal in different lights minutes after it was announced - suggesting how hard it will be to reach agreement on the outstanding issues around Iran's nuclear program. Iran said ships passing through the strait would be regulated by Iran and Oman - suggesting Tehran would seek to retain some control over the waterway.
And Iran said during the 60 days of negotiations it would seek "the removal of all primary and secondary sanctions, as well as resolutions against Iran." Any such move would require approval from Congress, which imposed some of the most punishing sanctions, and would likely provoke an outcry from Iran hawks in the U.S. who have worried Trump would give up U.S. leverage.
Also unclear is the financial incentives Iran will receive. A senior U.S. official who spoke to reporters on Friday said the two sides were circling around an agreement where Iran would earn economic rewards each time it met a set of U.S. demands. There may also be an element where Iran gets help rebuilding from the U.S. and Israeli bombing campaign that targeted thousands of sites across the country.
The U.S. and Iran remain deeply distrustful of each other and grave questions remain about their ability to reach a broader deal. What remains unclear is the view from Israel, where Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government jeopardized a signing at the last minute with new attacks on Lebanon.
Trump may face severe blowback from Iran hawks at home who worry he's just punting on the issues such as Iran's nuclear capability and its ballistic-missile program that were the reasons he began the war in the first place.
But Iran has also demanded access to billions of dollars in funds frozen in overseas bank accounts, as well as long-term relief from sanctions. Several European nations, including the U.K., France, Germany and Italy, said Sunday they were prepared to lift relevant sanctions if a deal is finalized.
The announcement was the result of weeks of indirect negotiations that have dragged on between Washington and Tehran since a ceasefire came into force in early April, with intermittent clashes threatening to jettison diplomatic efforts to end the war.
Iran shut the Strait of Hormuz shortly after bombardments by U.S. and Israel triggered the war, disrupting the conduit for what's typically a fifth of the world's supply of oil and liquefied natural gas. The way-point for vessels entering and exiting the Persian Gulf remains heavily impeded, with crossings only a small fraction of prewar levels.
Copyright 2026 Tribune Content Agency. All Rights Reserved.
This story was originally published June 14, 2026 at 7:13 PM.