Keir Starmer, UK prime minister, left, works with Sanae Takaichi, Japan’s prime minister, at 10 Downing Avenue in London, UK, on Sunday, June 14, 2026.
Andy Rain | Bloomberg | Getty Photographs
World leaders welcomed the U.S.-Iran settlement to finish the Center East conflict, with some European nations reportedly signaling they have been ready to elevate sanctions on Tehran in trade for the nation taking steps to curb its nuclear program.
After greater than three months of conflict, the U.S. and Iran reached a deal on Sunday that might convey an instantaneous and everlasting finish to the battle, in response to Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, with a signing set for Friday in Switzerland that is anticipated to open 60 days of extra talks on Iran’s nuclear program.
U.S. President Donald Trump mentioned he would authorize the speedy removing of the U.S. naval blockade. Whereas the ultimate phrases haven’t been launched, Iranian state media reported final Friday {that a} 14-page draft memorandum included the U.S. lifting oil sanctions and Iran committing to reopening the Strait of Hormuz inside 30 days.
The U.Okay., France, Germany and Italy mentioned in a joint assertion after the settlement was introduced that “Iran mustn’t ever purchase a nuclear weapon. We stand able to work with the US, Iran and the IAEA (Worldwide Atomic Vitality Company) to this finish,” in response to Reuters.
“It is a second of alternative to revive regional stability and stabilise the worldwide economic system,” the group, generally known as the E4, mentioned within the assertion, calling for the settlement to be “carried out quickly and comprehensively” and that the “pressing reopening of the Strait of Hormuz with unconditional and unrestricted freedom of navigation is important.”
U.Okay. Prime Minister Keir Starmer welcomed the deal as a “vastly essential step ahead in ending the conflict,” whereas stressing that the Strait of Hormuz, a essential power chokepoint that has successfully been closed during the conflict, should stay “totally and completely open.”
Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi mentioned that the nation welcomes the settlement as “a serious step towards decision of the scenario,” in response to a Google translation of her assertion on X on Monday.
“We strongly hope that this memorandum might be steadily carried out, that free and secure navigation within the Strait of Hormuz might be really ensured, and {that a} last settlement on Iran’s nuclear challenge and different issues might be realized on the earliest doable date,” Takaichi mentioned.
The Ministry of Overseas Affairs in Qatar additionally hailed the deal in a assertion, calling it “an essential step in direction of consolidating sustainable peace and selling financial progress regionally and internationally.”
The deal got here after months of stop-start negotiations and bouts of combating within the area since late February, roiling international power markets and stoking fears of a worldwide recession.
Oil dropped after the deal announcement Sunday, with Brent crude falling about 4% to $83 a barrel and WTI sliding 4.8% to $80.8.

