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#USProposes15PointPeacePlan 🇺🇸🕊️
Today’s 15-point peace proposal from the United States is being framed as a framework to end conflict—but a closer look shows it’s much more than that.
This isn’t a simple compromise. It reads like a structured set of demands:
Halt nuclear enrichment
Limit ballistic missile programs
Reduce support for certain regional groups
In return? Sanctions relief.
Iran’s reaction? “Maximalist and unrealistic.” The divide is clear—no shared version of reality exists yet.
Key insight: Peace negotiations aren’t always alternatives to conflict—they can be extensions of it. This plan is less a peace agreement and more a test:
Test of power balances
Test of diplomatic patience
Test of willingness to step back
The outcome won’t be determined by words on paper, but by how each side interprets them. If it fails, it may spark a new wave of tension. If it progresses, it will be because the costs of inaction became too high.
This is not just a peace plan—it’s a mechanism to see whether peace is even possible.