RFE
25 Mar 2026, 22:43 GMT+10
Iran appears to have dismissed a 15-point US plan to end thewarthat has spilled across the Gulf and roiled global energy markets.
The details of the US plan have not been made public, but it is widely believed to be similar in many respects to proposals made before the current conflict began with Israeli and US air strikes on February 28.
Iran's response, delivered via state television on March 25, said the US conditions are excessive and that Tehran will end the current war when it chooses and if its conditions are met.
New elements are thought to include demands by both sides concerning theStrait of Hormuz, a vital shipping route for global supplies of oil, gas, and other commodities that Iran is currently blocking.
US President Donald Trump has said talks are going well, while Iranian officials have said none are taking place. Pakistan, which has strong ties with both countries, has offered to host meetings.
SEE ALSO:
Trump Says US 'In Negotiations Right Now' On Ending War Despite Iranian Denials
The single most important US demand is one that Trump has repeatedly stated. He also says that Iran has agreed to it.
Theyd like to make a deal, he told reporters during an Oval Office event on March 24. Theyve agreed they will never have a nuclear weapon.
The United States and its allies, including Israel and major European nations, have been concerned about the prospect of Iran developing nuclear weapons for many years. Iran has always denied wishing to do so.
Even if this was true, Iran is now under new leadership and has now come under intense US and Israeli attacks that launched two wars -- the first one being June last year. The intentions of Supreme LeaderMojtaba Khamenei, who has still not been seen since his appointment was announced on March 8, are inscrutable.
Likewise, its not entirely clear to what extent he or other players are currently calling the shots in Tehran, nor the degree to which senior Iranian officials are even able to communicate with each other amid ongoing air strikes that have killed so many top figures.
The problem is that this government is fragmented. There are elements of the government that are fanatics, such as the [Islamic] Revolutionary Guards [Corps], who may try to kill officials who want to negotiate peace, Frederick Fleitz, vice chairman of the America First Policy Institute, told RFE/RL.
SEE ALSO:
Pakistan Steps Forward As Future 'Host' In Iran Diplomacy
The 15-point plan reportedly includes a 1-month cease-fire while details are worked out. The plan includes many other US demands, such as dismantling Iranian nuclear facilities, handing over enriched uranium stocks to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and agreeing not to enrich in the future.
Further points are said to put limits on Irans missile capabilities and an end to Irans support for regional proxy forces, such as Hezbollah, regarded as a terrorist organization by Washington.
While many of these were already US demands before the war, some, such as reopening the Strait of Hormuz and ending Iranian strikes on regional energy facilities, would be a response to Irans wartime actions since February 28.
In return, Iran would see sanctions lifted and get US assistance with a civilian nuclear power program.
The reported parameters of the US proposal do not lack ambition: Sanctions relief in return for sweeping Iranian concessions, Naysan Rafati, senior Iran analyst at the International Crisis Group, told RFE/RL.
But if past is prelude, its feasibility would rest on the Islamic republic's willingness to fold under fire on what have long been its red lines. On the nuclear front, for example, Tehran has continued to insist on the right to uranium enrichment It has also rejected the notion of negotiating over its missile program, he added.
Iranian officials have not only said talks are not taking place, theyve also mocked US statements on the matter, with military spokesman Ebrahim Zolfaqari saying that the Trump administration was negotiating with itself.
No one like us will make a deal with you. Not now. Not ever, he added in comments on March 25.
Meanwhile, some of Tehrans demands contradict US positions.
Examples include recognition of Irans control or authority over the Strait of Hormuz, along with the right to charge passage fees, and the right to an unrestricted missile program.
The Iranian demands also clearly cross US red lines, demanding Washington close its military bases in the Persian Gulf, pay war reparations, and guarantee that it will not attack Iran again.
For now, at least, the promise of economic relief and pain of continued strikes seem unlikely to prompt Iranian compromise on the scale Washington seeks, said Rafati. The regime as a whole doesn't yet see its wartime position as desperate enough to agree to the US terms.
SEE ALSO:
Fred Fleitz: US May Strike Irans Energy Infrastructure If Talks Fail
Fleitz had a similar take.
I think the biggest challenge is to get the Iranian regime to agree to anything. I think we're still in the process of getting them to agree to actually negotiate. I think we've made some progress with some initial queries, but we need to get an Iranian representative, sit down with the US or with an intermediary to start talking, he said.
The back and forth come as both sides launched air attacks on March 25.
The semi-official Iranian SNN News Agency said a residential area was hit in Tehran, with rescuers searching the rubble.
Kuwait and Saudi Arabia both said they had intercepted drone attacks, while Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps said it launched new strikes against Israel and US bases in Kuwait, Jordan, and Bahrain.
US And Iran Push Competing Peace Plans As Fighting Rages
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