Iran responds to the U.S. 15-point ceasefire proposal through intermediaries, demanding clear preconditions.

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On the 26th local time, it was learned that Iran officially responded last night through intermediaries to the U.S. proposed 15-point ceasefire plan.

According to informed sources, Iran clearly stated in its response that: The enemy’s aggression and terrorist acts must cease; objective conditions must be created to ensure that war does not recur; commitments to compensate for war damages must be explicitly made and implemented; all resistance organizations involved in the conflict on all fronts and regions must cease operations.

Iran emphasizes that its sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz is a natural and legitimate right that cannot be changed; the other side must acknowledge and fulfill its commitments. These conditions proposed by Iran are entirely different from the demands made during the second Geneva negotiations.

The informed source also emphasized that Iran is well aware that the U.S. statements about negotiations are just part of a “third deception” plan. Under the guise of negotiations, the U.S. has ulterior motives: first, to deceive the world by showing a desire for peace and an end to war; second, to maintain low global oil prices; third, to buy time for a ground invasion and launch new aggressive actions in southern Iran. If before the “December 12 War” outbreak last year, Iran still harbored doubts about the negotiation results and U.S. commitments, after the “December 12 War,” Iran has completely lost faith in whether the U.S. genuinely wants to negotiate. Whether it’s the “December 12 War” or the current US-Israel-Iran conflict, the U.S. has provoked hostilities during negotiations. Now, they are once again using negotiations as a pretext to pave the way for new crimes.

Previously, sources revealed that the U.S. proposed a 15-point agreement aimed at ending the war with Iran, including Iran’s promise never to develop nuclear weapons and opening the Strait of Hormuz as a “free sea.” Iran has repeatedly denied the so-called negotiation-related

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