The Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed that a high-level diplomatic meeting scheduled in Doha will focus heavily on establishing operational mechanisms to unfreeze sanctioned Iranian assets held abroad.
Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister is set to lead the delegation to meet with Qatari officials. The discussions aim to implement specific clauses of a previously signed Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between regional stakeholders. Tehran views full and unrestricted access to these frozen offshore financial assets as a primary and sensitive condition for ongoing broader diplomatic cooperation.
Sanctions Relief and Oil Exports Move Forward
According to official statements from Tehran, several key segments of the active MoU have already been put into effect. Iranian authorities indicated that the overall trajectory regarding the easing of financial blockades and lifting restrictions on Iranian crude oil exports is progressing at a level deemed acceptable by the government.
Despite this partial progress, the upcoming talks in Qatar are intended to lock down firm executive guarantees for the remainder of the funds, which remain stuck in international financial institutions due to secondary sanctions.
Regional Ceasefire Tied to Final Settlement
The Iranian Foreign Ministry explicitly highlighted that progress toward a comprehensive, long-term agreement remains conditional on strict geopolitical terms.
Officials emphasized that Clause 13 of the standing MoU makes transitioning into the final phases of negotiation completely dependent on regional stabilization. Specifically, Tehran stated that an immediate halt to military operations in Lebanon is a foundational prerequisite before any final binding treaty can be enacted.
Furthermore, Iran noted that establishing a formalized, transparent conflict-monitoring mechanism inside Lebanon is of paramount importance to current diplomatic efforts and remains a core component of the de-escalation tracking process tied to the agreement.




