Iran desk brief

Bloomberg reports leaked draft of US-Iran memorandum outlining ceasefire and negotiation terms

Bloomberg publishes details of an unconfirmed draft memorandum aiming to end hostilities and set a timeline for US-Iran negotiations and sanctions relief.

What happened

Bloomberg has reported leaked details of a draft memorandum of understanding between the United States and Iran that would formally end hostilities and establish a framework for further negotiations. According to Bloomberg, the memo calls for an immediate ceasefire, mutual commitments to refrain from hostile actions, and a 60-day timeline to negotiate a final agreement, with possible extensions.

Outside Brief is treating this as a source-led account. Any disputed responsibility, casualty figure, battlefield claim or single-source assertion should be treated as unconfirmed/hearsay unless confirmed by another reliable source or a named official. The draft reportedly includes an immediate lifting of the US naval blockade on Iran and outlines a phased withdrawal of US forces within 30 days following a final deal. The memo also envisions the eventual lifting of sanctions, an exemption for Iranian oil and related banking services from US sanctions, and the release of frozen Iranian assets.

On the nuclear front, the document reportedly has Iran reaffirm that it will never produce nuclear weapons. The memo suggests the two sides would maintain the status quo during negotiations, with outstanding nuclear-related issues and other disputes to be settled in the final agreement.

Known from the source

  • Bloomberg published details described as leaked of a US-Iran draft memorandum of understanding.
  • The memo reportedly includes provisions for an immediate end to hostilities and refraining from hostile acts.
  • It calls for a 60-day negotiation window with possible extensions for a final agreement.
  • The draft mentions immediate lifting of the US naval blockade on Iran and phased US troop withdrawal.
  • Sanctions relief would begin with exemptions for Iranian oil and banking services and release of frozen assets.

What remains unclear

This memorandum, if genuine and fully agreed, could reshape the regional security landscape by addressing long-standing conflict points such as sanctions, US military presence, and nuclear proliferation concerns. However, the report does not confirm the authenticity of the draft or the willingness of either side to finalize and implement these terms.

What remains unclear: Confirm whether the central claim is corroborated; until then treat it as unconfirmed/hearsay. Authenticity of the draft memorandum reported by Bloomberg. Official confirmation or denial from US and Iranian authorities. Verification of specific terms such as troop withdrawal timelines and sanctions exemptions.

Evidence note

Outside Brief has kept this brief source-led and attributed. Claims should be read alongside the original source linked below.

Original source: Middle East Eye. Open the source.

Outside Brief note: this story keeps the main source visible and separates what is reported from what remains unclear.