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Iran US Ceasefire 2026: Iran’s 10 Conditions for Peace Explained

The Iran US ceasefire 2026 announced a 14-day truce with Pakistan mediating. Learn Iran's 10 conditions for peace — from sanctions relief to Strait of Hormuz control — with MCQs and exam notes.

⏱️ 13 min read
📊 2,510 words
📅 April 2026
UPSC Banking SSC CGL NDA GLOBAL NEWS

“You can’t hug a porcupine. Not even over the phone.” — Arundhati Roy on her mother, Mary Roy

“The ceasefire is workable.” — US President Donald Trump on the Iran-US truce, April 2026

In April 2026, a fragile but significant two-week ceasefire was announced between Iran and the United States, marking a pivotal moment in Middle Eastern geopolitics. Following US-Israeli strikes on Iranian targets, retaliatory military actions, and a standoff at the Strait of Hormuz, both sides agreed to halt hostilities for 14 days — with Pakistan playing a key mediating role.

Iran has laid out a 10-point plan as its conditions for a lasting peace — ranging from sanctions relief and uranium enrichment rights to US troop withdrawal and compensation for war damages. This article breaks down each condition and its global implications.

10 Iran’s Peace Conditions
14 Days of Ceasefire
20% Global Oil via Hormuz
2026 Ceasefire Year
📊 Quick Reference
Event Iran–US Ceasefire, April 2026
Duration 14 Days
Mediator Pakistan
Key Waterway Strait of Hormuz
Nuclear Treaty Ref. JCPOA
US President Donald Trump

📜 Background: How Did It Come to This?

The crisis escalated sharply following US-Israeli strikes on Iranian targets, which Tehran viewed as direct violations of its sovereignty. Iran responded with defensive military actions, stoking fears of a wider regional conflict that could engulf the entire Middle East.

The Strait of Hormuz — through which roughly 20% of global oil passes — became a critical flashpoint. Iran threatened to restrict passage through the Strait, sending shockwaves through global energy markets. Against this backdrop, Pakistan stepped in as mediator, facilitating back-channel dialogue that eventually led to the two-week truce.

🎯 Simple Explanation

Think of the Strait of Hormuz as the world’s oil pipeline tap. Iran controls the tap. When tensions rise, Iran threatens to turn it off — which panics global markets. The ceasefire is essentially the world saying: “Let’s talk before someone actually turns that tap off.”

2015
JCPOA (Iran nuclear deal) signed between Iran and world powers including the US
2018
US under Trump withdraws from JCPOA; re-imposes sweeping sanctions on Iran
2024–25
Escalating US-Israeli strikes on Iranian targets; Iran retaliates militarily
April 2026
Two-week Iran–US ceasefire announced; Strait of Hormuz reopened; Pakistan mediates
Ongoing
Iran presents 10-point peace conditions; long-term framework negotiations underway

🕊️ The Two-Week Ceasefire Agreement

The ceasefire agreement has three key immediate outcomes: both sides halted military actions for 14 days, the Strait of Hormuz was reopened for international shipping, and negotiations began toward establishing a long-term peace framework.

US President Trump described the ceasefire as “workable” — diplomatic language that signals cautious optimism without making firm commitments. The temporary truce reduces immediate war risk, stabilizes oil markets, and crucially creates diplomatic space that did not exist before.

✓ Quick Recall

Pakistan’s Role: Pakistan acted as the key mediator in brokering the Iran–US ceasefire — a significant moment for Pakistani diplomacy and its standing as a regional bridge between East and West.

📌 Iran’s 10 Conditions for Peace: Explained

Iran’s 10-point plan reflects its core priorities — sovereignty, economic recovery, and security guarantees. Here is each condition explained:

1. Non-Aggression Commitment by the US: Iran demands a formal US pledge not to initiate military action. This addresses Tehran’s longstanding fear of regime change operations sponsored or supported by Washington.

2. Iranian Control over the Strait of Hormuz: Nearly 20% of global oil supply passes through this waterway. Iran insists on maintaining sovereignty while ensuring safe passage — a demand that gives Tehran enormous negotiating leverage.

3. Acceptance of Uranium Enrichment Program: Iran demands recognition of its right to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes. This is the most contentious point — the US and allies fear weaponization, making this central to any nuclear diplomacy.

4. Lifting of All Primary Sanctions: Primary sanctions directly target Iran’s economy, banking, and energy sectors. Their removal would allow Iran to re-enter global markets and rebuild its battered economy.

5. Lifting of All Secondary Sanctions: Secondary sanctions penalize third-party countries and companies that deal with Iran. These measures isolate Iran internationally and have deterred even friendly nations from trading with Tehran.

6. Termination of UN Security Council Resolutions: Iran demands annulment of UNSC resolutions that restrict its military and nuclear activities — a move that would restore its international standing.

7. End of IAEA Board of Governors Resolutions: Iran seeks relief from IAEA oversight measures, reflecting its desire for greater autonomy in nuclear policy — though this raises red flags for non-proliferation advocates.

8. Payment of Compensation: Iran demands reparations for economic losses caused by sanctions and military strikes. This is considered the most unrealistic demand — the US is extremely unlikely to agree.

9. Withdrawal of US Combat Forces: Iran insists on removal of American troops from Iraq, Syria, and the Persian Gulf — aligning with its broader goal of reducing US military footprint in the Middle East.

10. Complete Cessation of War on All Fronts: Iran demands an end to hostilities against groups it supports — including Hezbollah in Lebanon and Houthis in Yemen. This ties regional proxy conflicts directly into the ceasefire framework.

⚠️ Exam Trap

Don’t confuse Primary and Secondary Sanctions: Primary sanctions target Iran directly (its banks, oil exports, businesses). Secondary sanctions punish other countries and companies that trade with Iran — even if those third parties have no connection to the US. Both are listed as separate conditions in Iran’s 10-point plan.

Iran’s Demand US Position Likelihood of Agreement
Non-aggression pledge Reluctant; prefers strategic flexibility Moderate
Control of Strait of Hormuz US wants unrestricted free passage Low
Uranium enrichment rights Opposes weaponization potential Contentious
Lifting primary sanctions Uses sanctions as diplomatic leverage Difficult
Lifting secondary sanctions Key tool for isolating Iran Difficult
Compensation for damages Extremely unlikely to agree Very Low
Withdrawal of US forces Resists creating regional power vacuum Low
End of war on Iran’s allies Opposes Iran-backed militias (Hezbollah, Houthis) Very Low

⚓ Strategic Importance of the Strait of Hormuz

The Strait of Hormuz is arguably the world’s most strategically vital waterway. Situated between Iran to the north and Oman and UAE to the south, it is a narrow passage — just 33 km wide at its narrowest — through which approximately 20% of global oil supply flows daily.

Major oil-exporting nations — Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Iraq, and Iran itself — depend on the Strait for their exports. Any disruption would immediately spike global oil prices, trigger supply shocks, and destabilize economies worldwide. Iran’s insistence on maintaining sovereignty over the Strait is therefore not merely symbolic — it is one of the most powerful negotiating chips in global geopolitics.

💭 Think About This

If Iran can threaten to shut down 20% of the world’s oil supply at will, does that make it a more powerful actor than its military strength alone suggests? How does geography shape geopolitical leverage — and what does this mean for India, which imports heavily from the Gulf?

🌍 Global Impact of the Ceasefire

Security: The ceasefire reduces the immediate risk of a major Middle Eastern war that could have drawn in multiple regional and global powers. It provides breathing space for diplomatic negotiations and prevents miscalculation from escalating into full-scale conflict.

Economic: The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz immediately stabilizes oil supply and calms global energy markets. Potential lifting of sanctions — if negotiations succeed — could allow Iran to re-enter global trade, affecting oil prices, Indian energy imports, and broader market dynamics.

Geopolitical: The ceasefire shifts the balance of power in the Middle East. It affects US-Iran relations but also ripples outward to impact Israel, Saudi Arabia, China (a major Iranian oil buyer), Russia, and India. Pakistan’s mediating role also boosts its diplomatic standing in the region.

⚖️ Challenges in Implementation

The ceasefire faces three fundamental structural challenges. First, a deep trust deficit — both the US and Iran have a long history of broken agreements, from the JCPOA withdrawal to Iran’s subsequent nuclear escalations. Neither side is inclined to take bold leaps of faith.

Second, domestic politics on both sides make compromise difficult. Hardliners in Iran’s Revolutionary Guard and conservative factions in the US Congress are likely to resist concessions. Any deal that looks like capitulation risks political collapse at home.

Third, regional dynamics complicate matters enormously. Iran’s network of allies — Hezbollah, Houthis, Iraqi militias — are parties to conflicts the US wants resolved, but Iran has used these groups as strategic assets for decades. Asking Iran to abandon them as part of a peace deal is asking it to weaken its own regional position.

💭 For GDPI / Essay Prep

The Iran–US ceasefire is a case study in coercive diplomacy — where military and economic pressure is used to bring an adversary to the negotiating table without full-scale war. Compare this with the Cuban Missile Crisis (1962) or the North Korea denuclearization attempts — moments where brinkmanship created diplomatic openings. Is coercive diplomacy sustainable in today’s multipolar world?

🧠 Memory Tricks
Iran’s 10 Conditions — “NUCLEI CWCE”:
Non-aggression | Uranium enrichment | Control of Hormuz | Lifting primary sanctions | End secondary sanctions | IAEA resolutions removed | Compensation | Withdrawal of US forces | Cessation of war on allies | End UNSC resolutions
Strait of Hormuz = “20% Rule”:
20% of global oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz. Remember: one-fifth of the world’s oil in one narrow strait — that’s Iran’s trump card in negotiations.
JCPOA Connection:
“JCPOA broke in 2018, ceasefire woke in 2026” — The current crisis traces directly back to the US withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal (JCPOA) in 2018 under Trump’s first term.
📚 Quick Revision Flashcards

Click to flip • Master key facts

Question
How many conditions did Iran put forward for peace with the US?
Click to flip
Answer
Iran presented a 10-point plan as conditions for a lasting peace, covering areas from non-aggression pledges to compensation and troop withdrawal.
Card 1 of 5
🧠 Think Deeper

For GDPI, Essay Writing & Critical Analysis

🌍
Can economic sanctions ever be a substitute for diplomacy — or do they inevitably lead to military confrontation?
Consider: the Iran sanctions timeline from 2018–2026; how sanctions affected civilian populations; whether they changed Iranian government behavior; and what India’s experience of navigating US sanctions on Iran reveals about multilateral pressure.
⚖️
Is Pakistan’s emergence as a mediator between Iran and the US a sign of a shifting world order — and what are the implications for India’s foreign policy?
Think about: Pakistan’s traditional ties with both the Muslim world and the US; India’s relationship with Iran (Chabahar port, energy imports); how a lasting Iran-US deal could reshape regional trade routes and India’s strategic calculations.
🎯 Test Your Knowledge

5 questions • Instant feedback

Question 1 of 5
How long was the Iran–US ceasefire announced in April 2026?
A) 7 days
B) 30 days
C) 14 days
D) 60 days
Explanation

The Iran-US ceasefire of April 2026 was for 14 days (two weeks), during which both sides halted military actions and the Strait of Hormuz was reopened.

Question 2 of 5
Which country played a key mediating role in brokering the Iran–US ceasefire?
A) Turkey
B) Pakistan
C) Qatar
D) Oman
Explanation

Pakistan played the mediating role in brokering the Iran-US ceasefire, facilitating dialogue between Washington and Tehran.

Question 3 of 5
What percentage of global oil supply passes through the Strait of Hormuz?
A) 10%
B) 15%
C) 30%
D) 20%
Explanation

Approximately 20% of global oil supply passes through the Strait of Hormuz — making it one of the most strategically vital waterways on Earth.

Question 4 of 5
How many conditions did Iran put forward as part of its peace plan with the US?
A) 10
B) 5
C) 7
D) 12
Explanation

Iran presented 10 conditions (a 10-point plan) for a lasting peace with the United States, covering sanctions, nuclear rights, troop withdrawal, and more.

Question 5 of 5
What does JCPOA stand for in the context of Iran nuclear diplomacy?
A) Joint Council for Persian Oil Agreements
B) Joint Committee for Post-Conflict Operations Agreement
C) Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action
D) Joint Commission for Peace and Atomic Operations
Explanation

JCPOA stands for Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action — the 2015 Iran nuclear deal. The US withdrew from it in 2018, escalating tensions that led to the 2026 conflict.

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📌 Key Takeaways for Exams
1
The Ceasefire: A two-week (14-day) Iran–US ceasefire was announced in April 2026, halting military actions and reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Pakistan was the key mediator.
2
Iran’s 10 Conditions: Iran’s peace plan includes non-aggression pledge, uranium enrichment rights, control over Strait of Hormuz, lifting of primary and secondary sanctions, ending UNSC and IAEA resolutions, compensation, US troop withdrawal, and end of war on its allies.
3
Strait of Hormuz: Approximately 20% of global oil supply passes through this narrow waterway — Iran’s most powerful strategic asset in negotiations.
4
JCPOA Background: The current conflict traces to the US withdrawal from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA) in 2018, which triggered sanctions and years of escalating hostility.
5
Key Distinction — Sanctions: Primary sanctions target Iran directly; secondary sanctions punish third-party nations and companies that trade with Iran — a critical exam distinction.
6
Challenges Ahead: A lasting deal faces hurdles from trust deficit, domestic hardliners on both sides, and Iran’s proxy network (Hezbollah, Houthis) being tied into the ceasefire conditions.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What triggered the Iran–US conflict that led to the 2026 ceasefire?
The conflict escalated following US-Israeli strikes on Iranian targets, which Iran viewed as violations of its sovereignty. Iran retaliated militarily, raising fears of a wider regional war. The Strait of Hormuz became a flashpoint as Iran threatened to restrict passage, destabilizing global oil markets.
Why is Iran’s demand for uranium enrichment so controversial?
Iran insists it enriches uranium only for peaceful civilian purposes (energy). However, the US and its allies fear that enrichment technology can be weaponized to build nuclear bombs. This tension — civilian vs. military use of nuclear technology — is the central dispute of Iran’s nuclear diplomacy and the core of the JCPOA debates.
What is Iran’s most unrealistic demand in its 10-point plan?
Analysts consider the demand for compensation from the US for economic losses caused by sanctions and military strikes to be the most unrealistic. The US is extremely unlikely to agree to pay reparations, as this would set a precedent and face massive domestic political opposition.
How does the Iran–US ceasefire affect India?
India is significantly affected as a major oil importer from the Gulf. The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz stabilizes India’s energy supply chains. If sanctions are lifted, India could resume or expand oil imports from Iran. India’s Chabahar port project in Iran, which gives it access to Central Asia, could also gain fresh momentum from a thaw in Iran-US relations.
What are Hezbollah and the Houthis, and why do they matter in this context?
Hezbollah is a Lebanese militant group and political party backed by Iran, active in Lebanon and Syria. The Houthis are a Yemeni rebel group supported by Iran that controls much of northern Yemen. Iran’s 10th condition — an end to war on “all fronts including against its allies” — essentially asks the US and its partners to stop targeting these groups, tying regional proxy conflicts directly to the Iran–US peace framework.
🏷️ Exam Relevance
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Prashant Chadha

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