Middle East Crisis — April 8, 2026
40 days of airstrikes. 5,000 lives lost. Oil at $126. Now a fragile ceasefire — and ten demands that could either end the conflict or restart it.
How we got here
The current war didn't begin on February 28. It's the culmination of a two-year cycle of assassinations, missile strikes, and miscalculations.
Iran's proposal — April 7, 2026
Iran's government submitted a formal 10-point framework as the basis for peace negotiations. Trump called it "workable" but "not good enough." Click each point to see where the two sides stand.
Iran demands an immediate, permanent end to US and Israeli airstrikes on Iranian territory, military sites, and civilian infrastructure. The two-week ceasefire that began April 7 represents partial agreement — though Lebanon's inclusion remains disputed between the US, Israel, and Pakistan.
Iran has confirmed it will allow shipping to resume through Hormuz during the ceasefire period. However, Iran's proposal insists on maintaining a coordination role — effectively asserting ongoing authority over transit. Iran paused Hormuz traffic briefly on April 8 in response to Israeli strikes in Lebanon, demonstrating the leverage it intends to retain.
Iran demands that the ceasefire extend to Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen, and other Iranian-backed proxy forces across the region. This is a central point of dispute — the US and Israel have explicitly stated Lebanon is not included in the ceasefire, while Pakistan, the mediator, says it is.
Iran's proposal calls for the complete withdrawal of US combat forces from military bases across the Middle East — including facilities in Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan. This is a maximalist demand that the US has rejected outright.
Iran is demanding the lifting of all US and multilateral sanctions and the release of frozen Iranian assets — estimated at over $100 billion held internationally. The second Trump administration's "maximum pressure" campaign had pushed the rial to record lows. Secretary Bessent had called the currency collapse in December 2025 the "grand culmination" of that strategy.
Iran is demanding financial compensation for the damage caused by US and Israeli airstrikes — including damage to nuclear facilities, military infrastructure, and civilian sites. The US has not formally responded to this point, but it is widely considered a non-starter in its current form.
The most contentious point. Iran insists its right to enrich uranium is guaranteed under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and is non-negotiable. Iran had been enriching to 60% purity before the June 2025 strikes — far beyond civilian levels, and approaching weapons-grade (90%). The US position under Trump is that Iran must halt enrichment entirely.
Iran wants any eventual agreement enshrined in a binding UN Security Council resolution — making it harder for a future administration to unilaterally withdraw, as Trump did from the JCPOA in 2018. The US is unlikely to accept any framework that constrains executive authority on foreign policy.
Iran is demanding that the ceasefire encompass an end to Israeli operations in both Lebanon and Gaza as part of any comprehensive settlement. Israel has explicitly rejected this linkage, and the US has backed Israel's position that these are separate conflicts.
Iran wants formal security guarantees — legally binding commitments from the US and Israel not to launch future military strikes on Iranian territory. Given that the conflict began with exactly such strikes, this is a core Iranian demand. The form and enforceability of any such commitment is deeply contested.
By the numbers
Why both sides have an economic incentive to reach a deal — and why the longer this drags on, the worse the numbers get.
From pre-conflict levels through the Hormuz closure and ceasefire
The next 14 days
The ceasefire gives both sides a two-week window to move from a 10-point proposal to something closer to a deal — or to walk away and restart the war.