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Deal promises end to conflict

But details of MoU remain unclear as Tehran, Washington offer differing accounts

Updated: 2026-06-17 09:36
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A US military aerial refueling aircraft takes off from Ben Gurion Airport in Israel on Monday. According to previous reports, the US has said that if an agreement is reached with Iran, Washington will withdraw its military aircraft stationed at the airport. XINHUA

Lebanon truce

Iran's top diplomat was quoted as saying on Tuesday that the end of the Iran war included the end of Israel's occupation of Lebanon.

Iranian state television quoted Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi making the comment to foreign diplomats in a briefing.

"The end of the war in Lebanon is an inseparable part of complete end of the war," Araghchi was quoted as saying. But US officials argued that Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon wasn't a condition for the agreement and that Israel could respond to attacks by Hezbollah.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday said in a news conference that the Israeli military will remain in the "security zones" it controls in Lebanon, Syria and the Gaza Strip as long as necessary.

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz on Monday said Israel wouldn't withdraw its forces from Lebanese territory.

On Iran's nuclear program, both sides acknowledged that Tehran is committed to not developing nuclear weapons, yet they made diverging claims over the disposal of Iran's highly enriched uranium.

In a post on Truth Social on Saturday, Trump suggested the US will work with Iran to remove enriched uranium at an "appropriate time".

Tehran, however, has been firm in securing its right to enrichment on its own soil and against any proposal to transfer enriched uranium outside of Iran.

Tehran insists the only acceptable way of dealing with its highly enriched uranium will be diluting it within Iranian territory, Araghchi said in an interview with the state-run IRIB TV on Friday.

Both sides are making contradictory claims about the agreement on frozen assets and economic sanctions against Iran.

With major questions still unanswered, the deal's real challenge begins after its formal signing in Switzerland on Friday, kicking off 60 days of technical negotiations.

Experts said based on the details released so far, the agreement does not fundamentally resolve the longstanding differences between the US and Iran over issues such as the nuclear program, nor does it reduce the mutual distrust between the two sides.

"The reported agreement appears to focus on urgent issues necessary to halt escalation … More contentious subjects have been deferred to future negotiations," said Aram Kiwan, an Arab Israeli political analyst and columnist, noting that he sees the most likely scenario as a lengthy, phased negotiating process.

"At this stage, it is difficult to speak of comprehensive peace," said Suleiman Basharat, a Palestinian political analyst. "A single agreement can help reduce tensions, but it is unlikely by itself to deliver lasting peace across the wider Middle East."

XINHUA-AGENCIES

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