Sources confirm that a secret framework has been quietly finalised in Geneva, one that hands Iran a lifeline of cash and weapons in exchange for halting enrichment. Unlike the 2015 accord, this deal skips nuclear inspections and focuses on economic relief and military hardware. Documents obtained by this bureau show that frozen assets worth $10 billion will be released immediately, with another $5 billion tied to verified compliance.
Shipping manifests reveal that Iranian tankers have already loaded refined oil for Syria, while Russian cargo planes have offloaded missile components in Tehran. The key difference is enforcement: there is none. The new deal lacks snapback sanctions or UN oversight, effectively giving Tehran a green light to arm proxies while buying time for its nuclear breakout.
Critics call it a capitulation; insiders say it is a pragmatic trade to avoid war. Either way, the money is moving, and the bodies will follow.









