TBM Report
In a definitive recalibration of its diplomatic posture toward Washington, the Islamic Republic of Iran has formally announced that it retains no immediate blueprints or strategic intentions to engage in bilateral peace dialogues with the United States. Tehran articulated that its contemporary executive focus remains mathematically centered on the absolute enforcement of the “Islamabad Accord” and the retrieval of its statutory economic rights. Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson, Esmaeil Baghaei, confirmed this sovereign policy during an official deposition to the state-run news agency IRNA, systematic of Iran’s refusal to bypass structural prerequisites.
Spokesperson Baghaei underscored the specific legal metrics governing the treaty, noting: “Article 10 of the Islamabad Accord explicitly mandates the immediate liquidation of all export prohibitions against Iranian crude oil, while Article 11 statutorily demands the unfreezing and repatriating of Iranian sovereign capital currently sequestered in offshore banking networks. The Islamic Republic is currently consolidating its strategic leverage to ensure absolute compliance with these two distinct counts.”
The geopolitical architect further rationalized that according to Article 13 of the framework, the total operational execution of Articles 1, 4, 5, 10, and 11 constitutes an absolute, non-negotiable legal prerequisite before any permanent de-escalation or structural peace talks can formally commence between the two sovereign nations. This disclosure directly counters assertions made by US President Donald Trump, who publicly reported that high-level delegations currently convening in Doha, Qatar, were actively drafting the parameters of a comprehensive peace treaty.
Dismissing President Trump’s narrative as empirically invalid, Baghaei clarified that the Iranian delegation’s deployment to Doha is functionally limited to resolving the technical modalities of its blocked financial assets. Concurrently, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian issued a financial update confirming that approximately $12 billion of Iranian capital remains frozen within the Qatari banking apparatus. Following protracted regulatory negotiations, the US administration has issued a strategic “green light” to execute the immediate release of the initial $6 billion tranche, serving as a primary baseline for ongoing compliance evaluations.




