On May 21, 2026, Iran's government said the latest peace proposal from the United States has 'narrowed the gaps.' This means the two sides now agree on more things than before.
American envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are leading the talks. They are working with Pakistan as a helper in the negotiations. The proposed deal is called a memorandum of understanding. It would officially end the war and start 30 days of more detailed talks.
Oil prices remain above $100 per barrel because of the conflict. The Strait of Hormuz, an important waterway for oil ships, has been affected by the war. If a deal is signed, oil prices could fall quickly.
Iran announced on May 21, 2026 that the latest American peace proposal has 'narrowed the gaps' between the two warring parties, offering cautious hope in the 11-week conflict. The statement came from Tehran as negotiators worked to finalize a 14-point memorandum of understanding that could formally end hostilities.
The proposed memorandum would declare an end to the war and open a 30-day window for detailed negotiations on key issues. These include freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz, Iran's nuclear program, and the lifting of extensive U.S. economic sanctions against Tehran.
American envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are leading the U.S. negotiating team, working through Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif as a third-party mediator. Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi had previously issued ultimatums, but the tone of the May 21 statement suggested some movement toward a possible agreement.
Oil prices have remained stubbornly elevated, with Brent crude trading above $100 per barrel. Lloyd's of London war-risk surcharges on tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz have also remained high. A credible peace deal would likely lower both quickly, providing relief to global energy markets.
Iran's Supreme National Security Council issued a carefully worded communique on May 21, 2026, conceding that Washington's latest draft proposal had 'narrowed the gaps to some extent' -- a formulation read by Western diplomats as the closest Tehran has come to signaling conditional receptiveness since the conflict began in mid-March. The statement stopped well short of acceptance, but its measured tone contrasted sharply with the IRGC's inflammatory language of the preceding 48 hours.
The text under negotiation is a 14-point, one-page memorandum of understanding brokered through Islamabad. It would commit Tehran to forswear weaponization activities, accept enhanced IAEA snap inspections, and refrain from operating clandestine enrichment facilities, in exchange for a phased OFAC sanctions drawdown and the gradual unfreezing of billions in sequestered Iranian sovereign assets. A 30-day negotiating window for a comprehensive permanent framework would follow signature.
U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and senior White House advisor Jared Kushner have anchored the American delegation, relying on Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif as a back-channel intermediary after direct talks in Islamabad in early April. The Trump administration has framed the proposed memorandum as a structured on-ramp, designed to deliver visible forward momentum while deferring the most intractable provisions -- chiefly the question of uranium enrichment ceilings and the scope of post-war reconstruction liability.
Crude oil markets remain acutely sensitive to signals from the negotiating table. Brent futures have traded in a $100-to-$109 band since the ceasefire extension in mid-May, with Lloyd's war-risk surcharges on VLCC Hormuz transits still running at materially elevated levels. A credible path to a memorandum signature would be expected to compress that risk premium rapidly, while a collapse in talks could reignite kinetic operations and push oil toward the $110 psychological threshold that analysts associate with demand-destruction effects in import-dependent Asian economies.
Iran announced on May 21, 2026 that the latest American peace proposal has narrowed the gaps between the two warring sides, raising cautious hopes for a formal end to the 11-week conflict. Negotiators led by U.S. envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are working through Pakistan to finalize a 14-point memorandum of understanding. Oil prices remain above $100 a barrel as markets watch the talks closely.
Iran and the United States are talking about peace. The two countries have been in a war. They stopped fighting for a short time. Now they are trying to make a deal.
Iran said the new U.S. plan is better. They said it has made the gap smaller between the two sides. A gap means the things they do not agree on.
The United States wants Iran to stop making dangerous weapons. Iran wants the U.S. to lift sanctions. Sanctions are rules that stop Iran from trading with other countries.
People all over the world hope for peace. Oil prices are very high because of the war. If there is a deal, prices may go down.
1What did Iran say about the new U.S. plan?
2What are sanctions?
3What does the United States want Iran to stop making?
4What has happened to oil prices because of the war?
5What is a ceasefire?
6Iran and the United States are talking about peace.
7Iran said the U.S. plan made the gap bigger.
8Sanctions are rules that stop a country from trading.
9Oil prices are low because of the war.
10A ceasefire means the two sides stop fighting.
11Iran said the new U.S. plan has made the ___ smaller.
12The two countries stopped fighting during a ___.
13High oil ___ affect countries all over the world.