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G7 leaders still waiting for full details of US-Iran peace deal

World
By Big Man·2 hours ago·05:46 GMT·1 min read

World leaders at G7 summit left confused as full details of US-Iran peace agreement remain secret World leaders gathering at the G7 summit in Evian-les-Bains, France, say they still do not know the full details of the peace agreement signe

World leaders at G7 summit left confused as full details of US-Iran peace agreement remain secret World leaders gathering at the G7 summit

The deal — a one-and-a-half page document — was signed electronically on Sunday but has not been released to the public.

After a two-hour dinner overlooking Lake Geneva on Monday evening, several G7 leaders walked away just as confused about the details as when

World leaders at G7 summit left confused as full details of US-Iran peace agreement remain secret World leaders gathering at the G7 summit in Evian-les-Bains, France, say they still do not know the full details of the peace agreement signed between the United States and Iran. The deal — a one-and-a-half page document — was signed electronically on Sunday but has not been released to the public. After a two-hour dinner overlooking Lake Geneva on Monday evening, several G7 leaders walked away just as confused about the details as when they sat down. Even officials inside Trump's own government gave slightly different accounts of how the agreement works. Iran's parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf signed for the Iranian side — with a senior US official saying Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei simply does not sign such agreements. Washington and Tehran have made contradictory statements about the deal's terms. A senior US official said the full text would be released within 24 to 48 hours. Trump has declared the Strait of Hormuz open, posting on Truth Social: "Ships of the world, start your engines. Let the oil flow." France's President Macron has invited the leaders of Egypt, Qatar and the UAE to join Tuesday's G7 lunch — nations that played key roles in brokering the deal. The US expects Gulf nations to help fund a $300 billion reconstruction fund for Iran. Israel remains a complication — Prime Minister Netanyahu said he and Trump "do not always see eye to eye" on the agreement, as Israeli forces continued fighting Hezbollah in Lebanon on Monday.