Leaked US-Iran MoU Details Unveil Massive Private-Backed Reconstruction Fund, Global Bank Clearance, and Sudden Oil Sanctions Wipeout
The inner layers of the historic peace accord signed by the United States and the Islamic Republic of Iran have been blown wide open after the full text of the 14-point “Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding” leaked to international news desks, exposing an unprecedented global economic blueprint defined by a $300 billion reconstruction plan and sweeping sanctions rollbacks.
The highly sensitive policy disclosures unzipped early Thursday, June 18, 2026, shifting the global financial layout just as senior diplomatic envoys from Washington and Tehran finalize their flight paths to Burgenstock, Switzerland, for the initial implementation sessions on Friday. The document—which provides the legal and structural framework for the permanent termination of military operations across all fronts, including Lebanon—relies on massive financial carrots to permanently induce the dismantlement of Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.
The most shocking and fiercely contested data field inside the leaked 14-point manual is the creation of a massive sovereign rehabilitation framework. According to the text published by Bloomberg and regional news outlets, the United States has undertaken to cooperate with its regional allies to construct a comprehensive economic development program for Iran, guaranteeing a capital pooling of at least $300 billion to rebuild infrastructure shattered during the 110-day conflict.
The massive scale of the proposed fund has instantly triggered intense political friction inside Washington. Seeking to build an immediate political defensive shield against critics who accuse the White House of capitulating to adversaries, President Donald Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance have moved quickly to clarify the funding mechanics.
“We are not investing any money in Iran, let’s get that straight,” President Donald Trump stated firmly to reporters on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Evian, France, characterizing the cash-handout claims as media rumors. “It’s a framework. It’s an international investment fund that the United States will help facilitate in the event of a final deal. Private companies from Korea, Japan, Europe, and America are dying to get into that market of 90 million people and massive energy resources. If Iran behaves, if they completely dismantle the program, this fund gets activated through private capital, not U.S. tax dollars. And if they don’t behave, we go right back to dropping bombs right smack in the middle of their heads.”
Beyond the long-term reconstruction layout, the MoU unzipped immediate, high-velocity economic relief parameters designed to fully stabilize global shipping corridors and crash energy prices across the 2026 trading year.
To secure the immediate, toll-free reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, the U.S. Department of the Treasury has initialized instant administrative waivers completely shielding buyers of Iranian crude oil and petrochemical derivatives. Crucially, the waiver script extends deep into the global financial plumbing, lifting restrictions on corresponding banking services, insurance clearance networks, and maritime transportation assets to allow Iranian barrels to flow unhindered into international markets.
Concurrently, Article 11 of the text details an unyielding asset distribution guide. The United States has formally committed to issuing all necessary licenses to release and make fully available Iran’s vast pools of frozen or restricted foreign reserves currently locked inside overseas banking trenches.
However, to maintain critical leverage during the high-stakes diplomacy, the release of these assets is strictly metered, requiring verified compliance tracking by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) as negotiators attempt to hammer out a permanent treaty within a strict 60-day window.
International relations analysts point out that the agreement has cleverly instituted a “status quo” shield to protect the talks from external political shocks. Under the interim terms, Iran is legally bound to freeze its highly enriched uranium stockpile at current levels, while the U.S. is completely barred from imposing new unilateral sanctions or increasing its military presence in the proximity of Iran’s borders.
As multi-national corporate syndicates and global oil markets enter the second half of the calendar heavily sensitized to the rapid unwinding of Persian Gulf tensions, the leaked document proves that the Trump administration has opted for a highly transactional, real-estate-style approach to global security—trading immediate economic integration for the absolute containment of a nuclear threat.
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