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"Peace Has Never Been This Close," Pakistan's PM Says — But Trump Disputes the Reported Terms Within Hours

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2026-06-13 14:47:59
The US-Iran peace process took its most dramatic turn yet on Friday, with Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif — who has served as a mediator throughout the conflict — saying a "final, agreed upon text" has been reached and that the deal could be finalized "in the next 24 hours." Within hours, however, President Trump publicly disputed the reported contents of that deal, injecting fresh uncertainty into what had briefly appeared to be the most significant de-escalation signal since the conflict began on February 28.
The optimistic case: Sharif's timeline
Sharif's statements represent the most concrete and confident language from any party throughout the entire negotiation process. "Peace has never been this close as it is now," he wrote on X. He followed up by stating that "Pakistan is preparing for the electronic signing of the peace deal immediately after, followed by technical level talks next week" — language that describes not just an agreement in principle but active logistical preparation for signing.
Pakistan's role as mediator throughout the conflict gives Sharif's comments particular weight — he is not a party with incentive to oversell progress for domestic political reasons in the way US and Iranian officials might be, making his confident framing notable.
Corroborating signals from Trump and Iran
Sharif's comments followed a sequence of increasingly optimistic statements from other parties. Trump said in the Oval Office on Thursday afternoon that the US had "just made a great settlement of the war with Iran," subject to the "finalization of documents" — language suggesting substantive agreement had been reached with only procedural steps remaining.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi wrote on X, prior to Sharif's post, that a memorandum of understanding "has never been closer" — echoing Sharif's superlative framing from the Iranian side.
The complication: Trump disputes the reported terms
Iran's Mehr News Agency reported 14 purported provisions of the draft deal earlier Friday, including US commitments to lift oil sanctions, end its naval blockade, and release Iran's frozen funds — provisions that, if accurate, would directly address the Strait of Hormuz closure that has been the primary driver of oil prices above $90 and the resulting inflation pressure that has driven Federal Reserve rate hike expectations throughout the current crypto correction.
Trump responded to this reporting with anger. In a Truth Social post Friday morning, he wrote that the public reporting about the deal has "NOTHING to do with the terms that were agreed to, in writing" — a forceful denial that the leaked provisions reflect the actual agreement, even as he had described a "great settlement" just the day before.
The pattern continues
A senior Trump administration official told reporters Friday that the US could sign a deal soon but is not "100%" confident the agreement will be consummated — a hedge that, combined with Trump's denial of the reported terms, reflects the same whiplash pattern that has characterized this negotiation process since February. Iran itself had denied just one day earlier that a Sunday Geneva signing was scheduled, calling reports of a "final agreement" completely untrue.
The sequence within 48 hours — Iran denying a signing date, then Trump declaring a "great settlement," then Sharif declaring peace "never been this close" with a 24-hour timeline, then Trump disputing the publicly reported terms of that same deal — illustrates why markets have learned to treat each individual headline with substantial skepticism regardless of which direction it points.
What it means for markets
Despite the uncertainty, Friday's overall trajectory of statements has been net positive for de-escalation expectations, and markets reflected that: Brent crude fell to approximately $87 and WTI to around $85, continuing the decline from the $92-$93 levels of earlier in the week. Bitcoin held steady near $63,400 to $64,000 through SpaceX's historic Nasdaq debut, which itself surged 20% in early trading.
Standard Chartered's Geoffrey Kendrick had identified a genuine US-Iran peace deal as one of two catalysts — alongside the SpaceX IPO clearing forced ETF selling — supporting his call that Bitcoin's $59,375 low on June 5 represents the cycle bottom. If a deal genuinely signs within the stated 24-hour window, even with terms that differ somewhat from the leaked provisions, the resulting decline in oil prices and Treasury yields could provide meaningful additional support for Kendrick's thesis heading into the critical June 17 FOMC meeting.
Conversely, if Trump's dispute over the reported terms signals that the "agreement" Sharif described is less solid than portrayed — consistent with the pattern of repeated false dawns since February — markets may need to discount Friday's oil price decline as another premature reaction, with the risk of oil snapping back toward $90+ if the deal collapses entirely in the coming days.
The next 24 hours, as Sharif's own framing suggests, may finally provide the clarity that five months of negotiations have failed to deliver — one way or the other.
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