# [WARNING] Iran Confirms MoU to End War, Awaiting U.S. Response

*Saturday, May 23, 2026 at 2:29 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-23T14:29:20.855Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: Iran, UnitedStates, Pakistan, StraitOfHormuz, OilMarkets, CeasefireNegotiations
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/7825.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 13:32 and 14:02 UTC, Iranian officials stated that Tehran has agreed to a Pakistan-mediated memorandum of understanding that would end the war, lift the blockade, and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, and that Iran is now awaiting a U.S. response. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio separately signaled that Washington may have Iran-related news to announce in the coming days or even later today. This marks a decisive procedural step toward a ceasefire and potential reopening of a key global oil chokepoint, with immediate implications for energy markets and regional security.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

From 13:32–14:02 UTC on 23 May 2026, multiple public statements reshaped the status of negotiations over the Iran–Pakistan war and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz:

- At approximately 13:32 UTC (Report 13 context) and more explicitly by 13:38–13:39 UTC (Reports 2 and 3), an unnamed Iranian official stated that Iran has **reached a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Pakistani mediator** and is now **awaiting the American response**. The official specified that the MoU includes: (a) ending the war, (b) lifting the blockade, (c) opening the Strait of Hormuz, and (d) the departure of U.S. forces (exact formulation partially truncated but clearly references U.S. military presence).
- At 14:01–14:02 UTC (Reports 12 and 20), Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei reiterated that Iran is both “very far and very close” to an agreement, stressing that positions have moved closer but do not yet constitute a final accord.
- At 13:58 and again at 14:01 UTC (Reports 1 and 10), U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated that **some progress has been made in talks with Iran**, adding that the U.S. **might have something to announce about Iran in the coming days**, and hedged that there may or may not be news later today.

These statements collectively confirm that a draft MoU is in place with mediation by Pakistan, that Iran has signaled acceptance, and that the process is now awaiting a formal U.S. position.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

Key actors:
- **Iran**: The Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei and an unnamed Iranian official are speaking under the authority of Tehran’s foreign policy apparatus, almost certainly with Supreme National Security Council oversight. The reference to departure of U.S. forces suggests IRGC and security establishment buy-in at least to the negotiating framework.
- **United States**: Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s comments at 13:58–14:01 UTC indicate that Washington acknowledges progress and is actively considering whether to move to a public announcement. Final decisions would involve the President, NSC, State, and Defense, given implications for force posture and sanctions.
- **Pakistan**: Described as the mediator that brokered the MoU text, positioning Islamabad as a central facilitator for a ceasefire and Hormuz reopening.

3. Immediate military/security implications

The shift from informal talks to a drafted MoU with one side (Iran) publicly declaring acceptance is a **major inflection point**:
- On the ground and at sea, forces on all sides will begin positioning for either a ceasefire or a breakdown. Expect:
  - Potential **reduction in the most provocative naval actions** in and near the Strait of Hormuz as parties avoid incidents that could derail talks.
  - Continued risk of **spoiler attacks** by hardline factions or non-state actors opposed to compromise, especially against shipping or U.S. assets, to sabotage the process.
- Hezbollah has publicly been reassured of continued Iranian support (Report 13), indicating Tehran is signaling that any compromise over Hormuz and U.S. presence does not mean a broader retrenchment from regional proxy networks. That could complicate Washington’s calculus.
- If the MoU proceeds, we should anticipate:
  - **Phased reopening** of the Strait with verification measures.
  - Negotiations on sequencing: end of hostilities, adjustments in U.S. military posture, and possibly sanctions relief or guarantees.

4. Market and economic impact

This development directly targets a Tier-1 global chokepoint:
- **Oil**: The mere existence of a drafted MoU to end the war and reopen Hormuz is likely to compress the geopolitical risk premium in crude benchmarks (Brent, WTI). Price action will be headline-driven:
  - If U.S. signals positive reception or outlines a timeline in the next 24–48 hours, expect **downward pressure on prices** and a rally in tanker and import-dependent equities.
  - Any sign that Washington rejects or heavily amends the MoU could trigger a **reverse spike** in crude, as markets reprice for prolonged disruption risk.
- **Shipping and insurance**: War-risk premia and hull insurance rates for Gulf routes could begin to moderate on expectations, though underwriters will wait for tangible steps (ceasefire orders, verified reduction of attacks).
- **Currencies and EM assets**: GCC currencies (where not pegged), Pakistani assets, and broader EM FX may respond positively to credible de-escalation. Gold could see mild downside as safe-haven flows unwind, although any ambiguity in U.S. response will cap that move.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- **U.S. decision point**: Public and private deliberations in Washington will determine whether Rubio can move from hinting at “possible” news to an announced framework. Watch for:
  - A joint U.S.–Pakistan or U.S.–Iran–Pakistan statement.
  - Leaks concerning U.S. conditions (verification, regional behavior, missile/drone limits).
- **Messaging from Tehran and Islamabad**: Iran will likely continue calibrated leaks to maintain pressure on Washington and shape domestic expectations; Pakistan may seek public credit as mediator.
- **Operational posture around Hormuz**: Intelligence and naval reporting should be scrutinized for any drawdown orders or changes in ROE that anticipate a ceasefire.
- **Market reaction**: Energy and shipping markets will trade on each incremental headline. A clear confirmation of an MoU-based ceasefire and reopening plan could be strongly market-moving; a stalled or rejected MoU would drive renewed risk-off moves.

Bottom line: As of 14:02 UTC, the conflict and Hormuz crisis have entered a critical diplomatic phase, with a drafted MoU accepted by Iran and awaiting a U.S. response. This represents a material upgrade from previous ‘signals of progress’ and warrants close tactical and market monitoring.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
High potential for downward pressure on crude and shipping risk premia if markets judge reopening of Hormuz and war-ending terms as credible; near term, volatility likely as traders reposition around headlines and await any U.S. announcement. Regional risk assets (GCC, Pakistan) and EM FX could rally on de-escalation; defense and energy equities sensitive to perceived durability of any deal.
