Iran Demands Immediate Release of $11 Billion in Frozen Assets as Non-Negotiable Precondition for Any U.S. Talks in Islamabad

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Frozen assets dispute takes center stage in Islamabad this week. Iranian and American negotiators edge closer to formal talks. However, conflicting reports create confusion. One source claims the funds are free. Another denies any progress. This uncertainty clouds the entire diplomatic effort.

Iran’s parliamentary speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf leads the delegation in Pakistan. His team wants to verify the facts on the ground. Intermediaries have sent messages about released funds. Yet Iran’s official team has not confirmed them. Therefore, a key question remains. Will this condition be satisfied before real negotiations start?

Historical distrust complicates every step. The problems began after the 1979 Islamic Revolution. The United States froze $11 billion of Iranian assets under President Carter. Later agreements failed. The 1981 Algeria accord collapsed due to U.S. actions. Consequently, billions of dollars stayed locked for decades.

More recently, Iran has kept its nuclear promises. The U.S. has not kept its own commitments. Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi explained this clearly. He said gaining Iran’s trust is not easy. The U.S. must take concrete steps to rebuild confidence.

For Tehran, the frozen assets dispute is not just about money. It represents a long-standing national grievance. Iranian officials have drawn two major red lines. First, a comprehensive ceasefire in Lebanon. Second, the full unfreezing of all Iranian assets abroad. Neither condition has been met yet. Thus, Tehran remains cautious about engaging Washington directly.

Some partial progress did occur. South Korea released $7 billion of Iranian funds recently. But the process was messy. South Korea claimed currency devaluation. As a result, Iran received nearly one billion dollars less. In 2024, a prisoner swap allowed access to another $6 billion. Those funds moved to Qatari banks for humanitarian purchases. Then geopolitical events shifted again. After October 2024, U.S. media reported that Washington asked Qatar to block the funds.

Iran’s frozen money now sits in many countries. These include China, Iraq, Japan, and Qatar, each nation adds a layer of complexity. Each delay deepens Iranian frustration. Therefore, the frozen assets dispute will likely dominate any future talks. Without real financial restitution, meaningful dialogue seems impossible. The coming days in Islamabad will test whether both sides can finally move past this decades-old hurdle.

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