ExplainersIran Sends Fourth Peace Proposal to Pakistan — Trump Says "Not Satisfied,"...

Iran Sends Fourth Peace Proposal to Pakistan — Trump Says “Not Satisfied,” Oil Falls 3%

In the span of two weeks, Iran has sent four successive peace proposals to Pakistani mediators. Each one has moved the market — this one moved Brent 3% downward in a single session, its sharpest single-day fall since the Hormuz briefly opened on April 17.

What Happened

Oil prices fell Friday after Iran sent an updated peace proposal to mediators in Pakistan, raising hopes again that a settlement with the U.S. is still possible. U.S. crude oil futures fell 3% to close at $101.94 per barrel. International benchmark Brent lost nearly 2% to settle at $108.17. Pakistani officials confirmed to MS NOW that mediators received an updated proposal from Iran to end the war. The proposal has been delivered to the U.S., the officials said.

President Donald Trump later said he was not satisfied with Iran’s offer. “Iran wants to make a deal, but I’m not satisfied with it,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

The market move tells one story; Trump’s statement tells another. Oil falling 3% is the market’s reaction to any renewed deal signal — traders price probability, and a fourth proposal means Iran has not walked away.

Trump’s “not satisfied” is a negotiating posture, not a formal rejection: he used exactly the same phrasing before calling Iran’s third proposal “much better.” The gap between “not satisfied” and “unacceptable” is where deals are made.

The Four-Proposal Arc

Iran’s successive proposals over two weeks represent the clearest evidence yet that the blockade’s economic pressure is working on Tehran’s calculus. Each successive proposal has moved incrementally toward the US position:

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Proposal one — Hormuz-first: reopen the strait, end the war, nuclear talks in a later phase. Rejected by the US as removing nuclear leverage.

Proposal two — The “better paper” Iran produced within 10 minutes of Trump cancelling Witkoff’s Pakistan trip. Trump called it “much better but not enough.” Nuclear enrichment timelines extended but not eliminated.

Proposal three — The written red lines and framework delivered via Pakistan during Araghchi’s circuit. Described by Araghchi as a “workable framework.” Rubio said “better than we thought but nuclear still the wall.”

Proposal four — Friday’s submission. Contents not yet disclosed publicly. The 3% oil price fall suggests markets believe it represents meaningful progress.

CENTCOM’s Strike Plan

Axios also reported that the U.S. Central Command had prepared a plan for a “short and powerful” wave of strikes on Iran in hopes of breaking stalled talks between Washington and Tehran.

The existence of a prepared CENTCOM strike plan — described as “short and powerful” — is the military backdrop to every Iranian proposal. Iran knows it is on the clock. The strike plan is the stick; the diplomatic track is the carrot. The fourth proposal is Tehran’s answer to which one it prefers.

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