That post is mixing real negotiating points with exaggeration. Here’s what’s actually in the draft framework as of May 26, 2026:
*What’s confirmed in reports:*
*1. Ending hostilities*
Yes. The framework includes ending the war on all fronts, including Lebanon. Iran’s FM Araghchi told Hezbollah they won’t abandon allies, but a U.S.-brokered ceasefire in Lebanon is part of the talks. $
*2. Releasing frozen funds*
Yes. Iran’s draft demands release of billions in frozen funds as part of phase 1. U.S. officials say sanctions waivers and unfreezing funds are on the table during the 60-day period.
*3. U.S. naval presence*
Not confirmed. The draft includes the U.S. lifting its blockade of Iranian ports. But there’s no public mention of “reducing U.S. naval presence” as a demand. Trump’s side says the blockade stays until a deal is signed.
*4. Strait of Hormuz control*
This is where it diverges.
- Iran’s side says Tehran would retain management of the strait: determining routes, timing, permits.
- U.S./mediators say the plan is: Iran clears mines, strait reopens with no tolls, free passage for all ships after 30 days. 01ca
- Iranian officials also say management would be under a protocol agreed with Oman. “Iran and Oman will control it” is closer to the Iranian position, but “joint control” isn’t in the U.S. version of the draft.
*What’s not confirmed:*
The “6D chess” framing and “Trump has to agree to all these terms” is spin. Both sides say the draft is still a framework, not a final deal. Iran calls U.S. demands “excessive”, and the U.S. says gaps remain.