Iran Nuclear Deal Draft Leaked - Here's What We Know So far
Details of an emerging U.S.-Iran nuclear framework leaked Sunday, revealing terms on sanctions relief, uranium enrichment, and a 30-day timeline for reducing Iran's stockpile.

A draft framework for a nuclear deal with Iran has emerged, with key points leaked to Israeli media Sunday, as the United States and Iran remain locked in negotiations over Tehran's atomic program.
According to details published by Yedioth Ahronoth, the emerging agreement would include a permanent, immediate cessation of hostilities across all fronts, including Lebanon, with the United States committing not to intervene in Iran's internal affairs.
The framework would see Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium reduced within 30 days, with a renewed mechanism established for oversight of the Hormuz Strait under Iranian arrangements. Under the financial provisions, $24 billion in frozen Iranian assets would be released prior to implementation, alongside full American access to Iranian markets for oil and gas sales and unrestricted financial access.
On the nuclear side, Iran would be required to rejoin the Non-Proliferation Treaty and commit to not developing nuclear weapons, though it would retain the right to enrich uranium for civilian purposes. American sanctions would be lifted in stages, and new American military bases in the region would be prohibited.
The deal framework would receive final approval from the Israeli security cabinet, and the question of Iran's missile program would be deferred to a later stage of negotiations.
Notably, the agreement would obligate the United States to present Iran with minimum compensation of $300 billion for sanctions relief, and the nuclear talks would be concluded within 60 days, covering all nuclear issues with all sanctions removed.
The points were described by Yedioth Ahronoth as details that circulated in Iranian news agencies that Israel's "B team" — a reference to hawkish officials opposed to any deal — did not want attributed.