🚨 President Trump Offers Iran 15-Point Plan to End the War. Israel Isn’t Sure It’s a Good One.

President Donald Trump greets Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the West Wing of the White House, Monday, Sept. 29, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

The Trump administration has conveyed a sweeping list of 15 conditions to Iran as the basis for ending the current conflict, Israel’s Channel 12 reported, outlining demands that cover the full range of American and Israeli war objectives while also offering Tehran significant economic incentives in return.

The disclosure comes amid growing unease in Jerusalem over what Israeli political and security officials fear could be a rushed diplomatic process. According to Channel 12, senior Trump aides Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff have been driving a framework modeled on previous Trump-era agreements — a monthlong ceasefire during which both sides would negotiate the full 15-point deal — similar to the arrangements brokered with Hamas in Gaza and with Lebanon. President Trump confirmed Tuesday that indirect negotiations with a senior Iranian figure had produced roughly 15 points of tentative agreement.

Israel’s concern, the report notes, is not with the conditions themselves, which align closely with its own war aims, but with the pace and ambiguity of the process.

“The scenario of a rapid, ambiguous agreement in principle is giving Israel’s political and security leaders sleepless nights,” Channel 12 wrote, warning that a framework deal reached before its terms are precisely defined could leave Iran having effectively emerged with the upper hand.

Citing a Western source, Channel 12 published 14 of the 15 points. On the nuclear front, the US is demanding that Iran fully dismantle its existing nuclear infrastructure, permanently renounce the pursuit of nuclear weapons, and cease all uranium enrichment on Iranian soil. Tehran would be required to transfer its stockpile of approximately 450 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60 percent to the International Atomic Energy Agency on a timeline to be negotiated. The Natanz, Isfahan and Fordo nuclear facilities would be dismantled entirely, and the IAEA would be granted full access and oversight inside the country.

Beyond the nuclear file, Washington is demanding a fundamental shift in Iranian regional behavior. Iran would be required to abandon its proxy network paradigm, ending the funding, direction and arming of militant groups across the Middle East. The Strait of Hormuz must remain open as a free maritime corridor. Iran’s ballistic missile program would be curtailed in both range and quantity, with specific thresholds to be determined in later negotiations, and future missile use would be restricted to self-defense.

In exchange, Tehran would receive a full lifting of international sanctions, along with US assistance in developing a civilian nuclear program — including continued operation of the Bushehr nuclear power plant for electricity generation. Notably, the so-called “snapback” mechanism, which allows for the automatic reimposition of sanctions upon Iranian non-compliance, would be removed — a concession that had been a sticking point in previous nuclear negotiations.

The fifteenth condition was not disclosed in the report.

The outline represents one of the most comprehensive diplomatic frameworks put forward since the collapse of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. Whether Iran will engage with the terms — and whether Washington and Jerusalem can agree on what constitutes an acceptable final deal — remains to be seen.

(YWN World Headquarters – NYC)

4 Responses

  1. And what happens in a few years when we find out, they didn’t follow the conditions?
    Donald trump will no longer be in office and another lame president will fail to act.

  2. If they ever agreed to even half of those things there never would have been a war. Sometimes war is what it takes to get you there. Do I trust them still no

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