Analysis: US-Iran Negotiations Focus on Three Key Sticking Points, with Hormuz Dispute at the Forefront
BlockBeats News, April 12th, according to The New York Times, the current US-Iran negotiations face three main sticking points: the Strait of Hormuz reopening issue, the uranium enrichment issue, and the unfreezing of Iranian overseas assets.
Strait of Hormuz:
The Iranian side has rejected the US-proposed "joint control" scheme, insisting on retaining control of the Strait of Hormuz and claiming the right to charge "transit fees" to passing vessels. Iran has stated that it will only consider arrangements for strait reopening after a final peace agreement is reached between both parties.
The US, on the other hand, holds a starkly different position. US President Trump stated on the 10th that the Strait of Hormuz is international waters, and regardless of "Iranian cooperation," the strait will be reopened "soon," and he will not allow Iran to charge transit fees.
Nuclear Issue:
The US has demanded that Iran hand over its entire near-weapons-grade enriched uranium stockpile, weighing about 900 pounds. Iran has put forward a counterproposal, but the two sides have failed to reach a compromise. Additionally, the US has also demanded that Iran not only refrain from developing nuclear weapons currently but also commit long-term to not acquiring related capabilities and technology. The US has stated that they have not yet seen a "clear willingness from the Iranian side."
Asset Freeze:
Iran has demanded compensation from the US for the damages caused by the six-week airstrikes and the unfreezing of around $27 billion of its oil revenue located in Iraq, Luxembourg, Bahrain, Japan, Turkey, and Germany, to be used for post-war reconstruction. The US has rejected the above demands.
You may also like
Morning Report | Samsung announces a 265.5 trillion won investment plan, focusing on semiconductor and AI computing power data centers; Vitalik publishes an article detailing the entire technology tree behind the confusion protocol (iO) mainline
What you bought on CEX is really not US stocks: Analyzing the 94% liquidation monopoly and the evaporation of equity under a five-layer pipeline
In such a crowded cross-border payment arena, where is the next stop for the future?
Why Is Bitcoin Down in 2026? What We Can Learn From 2022
The large models in the United States are moving towards closure in the name of security
From the white-haired stock god to the billionaire fund mogul, the smart people shorting Nvidia are all getting rich using the same framework
Morning Report | CoinEx becomes a key hub for Iran to evade sanctions, involving over $3.8 billion in funds; Kalshi seeks a new round of financing, with a valuation potentially rising to $40 billion
Global Launch: As predictions become the most scarce asset in the AI era, Manadia is defining the next generation of the value internet
Why do cryptocurrency projects always like to change their names?
Who is footing the bill for the $64 billion accounting frenzy?
I never expected that the first application of AI x Crypto would be in security auditing
What is your view on Binance's competitive advantages?
ETH has entered a non-consensus phase, and the turning point is approaching!
The shift in the cloud of the air: from despising stablecoins a year ago to the high-profile entry of capital today
The survival dilemma of small and medium exchanges behind the withdrawal anomalies exposed by AscendEX
Why Is Bitcoin Falling Below $60K? 5 Key Market Drivers Explained
Bitcoin has dropped sharply amid ETF outflows, Strategy stock weakness, AI stock rallies, and changing Fed expectations. Explore the key forces driving BTC’s latest correction and what traders should watch next.
