FYI, this is neither a peace treaty nor a "surrender," but rather a conditional ceasefire and a ticking clock straight out of "The Art of the Deal."
By titling the Iran framework a "Memorandum of Understanding," the administration deliberately bypassed the strict Senate ratification required for a permanent treaty. Instead, this functions like a classic corporate Letter of Intent—a temporary, transactional bridge that halts military action and opens shipping lanes on a trial basis to test the other side's compliance. Crucially, it triggers a strict 60-day countdown to hammer out dense nuclear verification details. If those conditions aren't met before the timer hits zero, the deal dissolves. It buys brief military and economic leverage, but the final deal has yet to be signed.
Point 13 in the MOU confirms this. This is NOT the final deal. If there is to be one, that is 60 days away.
Point 13: The Conditional Negotiation Bridge Explicitly states that entering the final rounds of negotiations is entirely subject to the continuous, successful implementation of the core steps (the ceasefire, blockade removal, waterway de-mining, oil waivers, and asset rules). If either side stops complying, the bridge to a final deal collapses.