A leaked document obtained by this newsroom has exposed the full terms of the secretive US-Iran agreement, a deal negotiated behind closed doors that sources say amounts to a bailout of a regime accused of funding terror. The 47-page memorandum, marked 'Confidential', lays out a framework for lifting sanctions in exchange for nuclear concessions. But the fine print reveals quid pro quos that go far beyond the nuclear issue.
Sources confirm that the accord includes a clause forcing the US to unfreeze $6 billion in Iranian assets held in Iraqi banks. These funds, long frozen under terrorism sanctions, are set to flow back to Tehran in monthly tranches. Critics argue this cash injection will fuel proxy wars across the Middle East. One European diplomat told me: 'The Americans are paying off a hostage-taker.'
The document also chronicles a secret side deal on ballistic missiles. Iran commits to a five-year freeze on testing missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads. But there is no verification mechanism. No inspectors. Just a promise. In return the US will not block arms sales to Iran after 2024, opening the door for Russian and Chinese weaponry.
Further analysis reveals an annexe labelled 'Humanitarian Cooperation'. This permits Iranian oil exports to designated countries with proceeds going to purchase food and medicine. But tracked transactions show the same ships carrying oil to Venezuela and Syria. One intelligence source called it 'sanctions laundering'. The US Treasury is aware but has not commented.
The White House statement this morning hailed the deal as a 'diplomatic breakthrough'. But my sources inside the negotiating team describe a frantic, one-sided process. 'The Iranians held all the cards,' a participant said. 'They knew we were desperate to avoid a war.'
Meanwhile, Israeli officials have privately condemned the agreement. A Mossad assessment warns it will accelerate Iran's path to a bomb. The leaked document itself contains no provisions for snap-back sanctions should Iran cheat. That's a glaring omission.
The full text is now online. Read it yourself and decide if this is peace or surrender.








