Iran desk brief

Mediators Reportedly Close to 60-Day US-Iran Ceasefire Extension Deal

The Financial Times reports mediators are nearing an agreement to extend the US-Iran ceasefire by 60 days, including talks on the Strait of Hormuz and Iran’s uranium stockpile, with associated sanctions relief.

What happened

The Financial Times reports that mediators are close to finalising a deal to extend the ceasefire between the US and Iran by an additional 60 days. According to the report, the proposed agreement includes measures such as the gradual reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and negotiations on reducing or transferring Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium.

Outside Brief is treating this as a source-led account. Any disputed responsibility, casualty figure or battlefield claim should be read as unconfirmed/hearsay unless confirmed by another reliable source. In return for these steps, Washington is reportedly expected to ease its blockade on Iranian ports, offer some sanctions relief, and begin phased releases of Iranian assets currently frozen overseas. The details remain unconfirmed outside the mediator sources cited in the Financial Times.

The renewal of the ceasefire and linked negotiations on nuclear material and the vital shipping lane could ease escalating tensions that have long threatened regional stability. The Strait of Hormuz is a critical chokepoint for global oil shipments, making any reopening central to economic and security calculations in the Middle East.

Known from the source

  • The Financial Times reports mediators are close to finalising a 60-day extension of the US-Iran ceasefire.
  • The proposed deal reportedly involves reopening the Strait of Hormuz gradually and discussions regarding Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium.
  • Washington would ease the blockade on Iranian ports, offer sanctions relief, and start phased releases of Iranian frozen assets as part of the deal.

What remains unclear

However, the report does not confirm the agreement itself, and key elements such as the scale of the sanctions relief and exact steps on uranium stockpiles remain subject to negotiation and verification. Previous rounds of talks have seen fluctuating progress on similar issues.

What remains unclear: Independently confirm the ceasefire extension deal and its terms beyond mediator reports. Verify official statements or acknowledgements from US and Iranian authorities on the arrangement. Confirm details on sanctions relief measures and phased asset release. Ensure the headline clearly reflects the report and does not imply confirmed agreement.

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.