The 60-day clock: where the US–Iran truce stands
A memorandum signed on 17 June opened a 60-day window to close the deal. Lebanon nearly knocked it over — then steadied again.
After months of jolts across the Middle East, there’s now something that looks like a real truce — but it’s hanging by a thread and on a deadline.
On 17 June, the US and Iranian presidents signed a memorandum of understanding extending the ceasefire by 60 days. The idea is simple: hold fire and use that time to negotiate the final terms. The calendar is the unfriendly part — it’s a clock, ticking.
Why it nearly came apart
Mid-week, the trouble came from the side door: Israel and Hezbollah traded fresh strikes in Lebanon, and that threatened to topple the US–Iran talks in Switzerland. On Friday the 19th, Israel and Hezbollah renewed their own truce after Washington pushed for a pause. Iran — which wasn’t in the talks and didn’t sign the main deal — had already warned that if Lebanon keeps burning, it won’t feel bound by anything.
The short version: the war has stopped, but the peace isn’t sealed. The next few days will tell whether that 60-day memo becomes a deal — or whether the clock runs out with nothing signed.
Illustrative · Photo: Hamid Mohammad Hossein Zadeh Ha / Pexels