# [FLASH] US–Iran Draft Peace Deal Reached To End Hormuz War

*Saturday, May 23, 2026 at 6:19 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-23T18:19:28.333Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: US-Iran, Hormuz, MiddleEast, Oil, EnergyMarkets, Ceasefire, Diplomacy
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/7849.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 17:08 and 18:02 UTC, U.S., Iranian, Pakistani, and media sources reported that Washington and Tehran have approved a draft peace deal/MoU expected to be announced within 24 hours. Reported terms include a permanent end to the war across the region, lifting of the U.S. naval blockade, reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and eventual U.S. military withdrawal, with nuclear issues deferred. This marks a potential endgame to the Hormuz conflict with immediate global energy and security implications.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

From 17:08–18:02 UTC on 23 May 2026, a cluster of reports signaled that the U.S.–Iran war and Hormuz crisis have reached a decisive diplomatic inflection point:

- 17:08 UTC (Report 45, Al Jazeera via Middle_East_Spectator): Key alleged MoU terms disclosed: a permanent end to the war "in the entire region, including Lebanon," U.S. lifting the naval blockade, Iran reopening the Strait of Hormuz, and American forces leaving the region. Nuclear issues are explicitly pushed to a later phase.
- 17:08 UTC (Report 46): Separate source states a draft MoU has been accepted by both Iran and Pakistan, focused on permanently ending the war with nuclear issues deferred until after substantial U.S. concessions. This suggests a parallel Iran–Pakistan track integrated with the wider deal architecture.
- 17:22 UTC (Report 32): Ecuadorian outlet reports U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Iranian FM Esmail Bagaei have publicly announced “acercamientos” (approaches) to end the war, reinforcing that formal talks are active and acknowledged by both capitals.
- 17:28–18:02 UTC (Reports 3 & 24, Washington Times via BossBotOfficial): U.S. and Iran are expected to announce a draft peace deal within 24 hours, turning the current six‑week ceasefire into a permanent peace agreement, with senior officials on both sides already approving the proposal, pending final leader sign-off.
- 17:09 UTC (Report 44): Trump is slated to hold a 13:00 (likely ET) conference call with leaders of Pakistan, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Jordan, Turkey, and Egypt regarding Iran – an alignment meeting with all key Gulf and regional stakeholders.
- 17:19–18:05 UTC (Reports 1, 19, 25, 27, 28): Trump publicly characterizes the deal with Iran as “getting better and better,” insists he will only sign if the U.S. “gets everything we want,” and references enriched uranium concerns. He acknowledges a split among regional leaders: some pushing for a strike on Iran, others urging him to accept the deal.

This build-out sits on top of earlier alerts already noting an imminent peace deal and Hormuz arrangement. New today is the explicit confirmation of a mutually accepted draft, concrete MoU terms, and coordinated outreach to regional leaders.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

- United States: President Trump is the ultimate decision-maker on signing the agreement, with Secretary of State Marco Rubio managing diplomatic channels. The Pentagon and CENTCOM own implementation of naval and force posture changes once ordered.
- Iran: Negotiations are led by Foreign Minister Esmail Bagaei and the Foreign Ministry, with Supreme Leader and IRGC command structure required for final greenlighting, especially on Hormuz access and proxy de-escalation (Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen).
- Pakistan: Field Marshal Asim Munir just concluded a visit to Tehran (Report 22), and Pakistani officials describe the emerging agreement as “fairly comprehensive to terminate the war” (Report 2). Pakistan appears to be both a stakeholder (border, energy, trade) and a facilitator.
- Gulf and regional states: Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Jordan, Turkey, and Egypt are drawn into Trump’s 1 pm conference call to align on terms, security guarantees, and post-conflict architecture. Israel is a critical but more indirect actor, with Trump publicly emphasizing he will not agree to a deal that is “not good for Israel.”

3. Immediate military and security implications

- If signed, the MoU would:
  • End active hostilities between U.S. and Iranian/proxy forces across the region, including rocket and drone exchanges in Iraq, Syria, and the Gulf, and potentially de‑escalate the Israel–Hezbollah front (explicitly mentioned as “including Lebanon”).
  • Lift the U.S. naval blockade and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, normalizing maritime traffic and sharply reducing risk of tanker seizures or anti-ship attacks.
  • Commit the U.S. to a phased military withdrawal from key regional positions, shifting the local balance of power toward Iran and its allies over time and raising concerns among Gulf monarchies and Israel about a security vacuum.
- Countervailing pressures:
  • Some regional leaders are explicitly pressing for renewed U.S. strikes on Iran (Report 27), suggesting that spoiler behavior – particularly from hardline Israeli or Gulf elements – is possible.
  • Iran’s Foreign Ministry still asserts that “The Strait of Hormuz is none of America’s business” (Report 47), indicating Tehran is not willing to frame concessions as capitulation and may insist on face-saving mechanisms without intrusive U.S. oversight.
- The next 24–48 hours are thus a high‑risk window: either the ceasefire locks into a political settlement or collapses under hardliner pushback.

4. Market and economic impact

- Energy: A credible agreement to end the Hormuz conflict and reopen the strait is a structural positive supply shock. Rough expectations:
  • Brent/WTI: potential immediate drop as much as 5–10% from conflict‑risk premiums being priced out, though the initial move may be partially faded until formal signing.
  • Freight and insurance: VLCC rates and war-risk insurance premia for Gulf routes should compress sharply if shipping channels are demonstrably safe.
  • LNG and refined products: Reopening Hormuz steadies Asian LNG supplies and European refined product flows, easing pressure on power prices and inflation.
- FX and rates:
  • Safe havens (USD, CHF, JPY, gold) likely soften on de‑escalation; EM and high-yield FX gain, particularly Gulf currencies, the Pakistani rupee, and potentially Turkish lira if risk sentiment improves.
  • U.S. Treasuries could see modest selling as geopolitical risk premium falls, steepening the curve slightly.
- Equities and sectors:
  • Global risk assets gain: airline, shipping, EM, and Europe and Asia ex‑Japan indices particularly sensitive.
  • Energy equities: short‑term headwinds for oil majors and E&Ps from lower prices, but positive for refiners and energy‑intensive industries.
  • Defense stocks: could underperform on expectations of reduced U.S. operational tempo and procurement specific to Gulf operations.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Announcement timing: Based on Washington Times reporting and current statements, a joint or coordinated announcement is likely by Sunday afternoon local time (roughly within the next 24–36 hours), potentially after Trump’s conference call with regional leaders.
- Negotiation endgame: Core outstanding issues include sequencing of U.S. sanctions relief, verification of Iranian de‑escalation, and assurances to Israel and Gulf states. Nuclear matters will be parked for a follow‑on track, reducing immediate friction but leaving a major future flashpoint.
- Spoiler risks: Hardline factions in Israel, IRGC elements, or regional proxies (e.g., Hezbollah, Iraqi militias, Yemen actors) may attempt disruptive attacks to derail the process. Markets should be prepared for headline‑driven intraday volatility.
- Operational implementation: Even after signature, practical reopening of Hormuz and lifting of the blockade will require several days to weeks to stand down forces, clear mines (if present), and adjust insurance and routing. Watch for U.S. Navy advisories, NOTAMs, and Lloyd’s bulletins as high‑confidence implementation signals.

Net assessment: This is a pivotal shift toward ending the Hormuz war and reducing systemic geopolitical risk. While execution risks remain high, national leadership and trading desks should position for a regime shift in Gulf security and global energy pricing, with elevated volatility during the decision window.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
If implemented, a U.S.–Iran peace deal ending the Hormuz conflict and blockade would likely trigger a sharp drop in crude benchmarks and freight risk premia, a rally in risk assets (global equities, EM FX, high-yield credit), and a pullback in safe havens (gold, USD, CHF). However, uncertainty over final signature and competing pressures for renewed strikes still support short-term volatility in oil, defense stocks, and regional currencies.
