US and Iran reported to sign peace deal with nuclear guarantees and compensation in Geneva
A reported peace agreement between the United States and Iran is said to include guarantees from Tehran that it will never seek nuclear weapons, along with financial compensation to the Iranian government. The deal is described as ending the war in the Middle East, although the full text has not been officially released. According to the information provided, the agreement was signed virtually over the weekend and is due to be signed in person on Friday in Geneva.
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The reported details were said to come from a television network that had access to the full text of the agreement on Wednesday. The same account says the US government confirmed the virtual signing took place at the weekend. It also says the in-person ceremony is planned for 19 June in Geneva, Switzerland.
No further official publication of the agreement has been confirmed in the supplied material. If accurate, the reported terms would mark a major shift in the long-running dispute over Iran's nuclear programme and the wider conflict in the Middle East. A pledge not to pursue nuclear weapons would be central to any such deal, given years of international concern over Iran's nuclear ambitions.
The inclusion of financial compensation suggests the agreement may also address broader political or economic grievances beyond the nuclear issue. The reported signing comes against the backdrop of a conflict that has drawn in regional and international actors and has repeatedly raised fears of wider escalation. Any agreement involving the United States and Iran would carry significance well beyond the two governments, particularly because of the nuclear question and the role both countries play in regional security.
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A formal ceremony in Geneva would also place the deal in a diplomatic setting often used for high-level international negotiations. The supplied material does not say what the compensation amount is, what enforcement mechanisms are included, or whether other parties are involved in the agreement. It is also unclear whether the reported text has been accepted in full by both sides or whether any changes could still be made before Friday's ceremony.
The key next step is the planned in-person signing in Geneva, which may clarify whether the reported terms are final and how they will be implemented.


