VALOURS 13 POINT PLAN TO END THE US IRAN WAR

    Administrator

    A Pragmatic Path Forward: 13 Steps to Reduce U.S.-Iran Tensions and Advance Regional Stability

    Authored for public dissemination by independent policy analysts -- March 2026

    This brief presents a realistic, reciprocal, and verifiable roadmap to reduce tensions, rebuild diplomatic capacity, and foster regional stability between the United States and Iran. It acknowledges the absence of formal war but recognizes deep-seated mistrust, overlapping regional conflicts, nuclear concerns, and humanitarian consequences of prolonged confrontation. Each step is sequenced for feasibility, prioritizes mutual benefit, and embeds built-in verification.


    The 13-Point Roadmap

    I. Immediate De-escalation & Confidence Building

    1. Suspend new unilateral sanctions targeting civilian sectors (e.g., medicine, food, academic exchange) for 12 months, conditioned on Iran's continued adherence to IAEA monitoring obligations.
    2. Establish a confidential, direct U.S.-Iran channel via neutral facilitation (e.g., Oman), focused exclusively on crisis prevention and humanitarian coordination.
    3. Mutually release designated dual nationals and unjustly detained persons in parallel, verified by the ICRC, with joint transparency reports.

    II. Nuclear Diplomacy & Verification

    1. Reaffirm commitment to the NPT and IAEA safeguards; Iran grants full, timely inspector access at declared sites; U.S. refrains from obstructing peaceful nuclear cooperation under Article IV.
    2. Negotiate an interim understanding: Iran caps enrichment at <=3.67% and stockpile at <=300 kg for 18 months; U.S. lifts secondary oil sanctions up to 1 million bpd (IAEA-verified).
    3. Launch technical working groups (U.S., Iran, E3, IAEA) to address outstanding verification questions using agreed forensic protocols and deadlines.

    III. Regional Security & Proxy Dynamics

    1. Issue a joint statement acknowledging shared interest in Yemen de-escalation; U.S. supports UN ceasefire reinforcement; Iran pledges to halt arms transfers to Houthis in violation of UNSCR 2216.
    2. Coordinate humanitarian aid corridors in Syria and Iraq, co-facilitated by UN and regional actors (Jordan, UAE), with real-time cargo tracking and third-party auditing.
    3. Initiate discreet trilateral dialogues (U.S.-Iran-Saudi Arabia) on Gulf and Red Sea maritime security, addressing smuggling and piracy.

    IV. Diplomatic Normalization & Institutional Re-engagement

    1. Exchange low-level liaison officers (non-resident, based in third countries) to manage consular affairs, visas, and educational exchanges.
    2. Resume participation in multilateral forums (e.g., WHO, ILO, ITU) with professional engagement protocols.

    V. Long-Term Foundations & Accountability

    1. Convene a Track II expert commission to draft a "Regional Security Framework for the Gulf," outlining arms control, incident prevention, and dispute resolution principles (deliverable within 18 months).
    2. Establish a Joint Implementation and Review Mechanism (JIRM) -- co-chaired by U.S. and Iranian officials with rotating international observers -- to assess progress biannually and publish public scorecards.

    Guiding Principles

    • Reciprocity: No step proceeds without demonstrable, concurrent action by the other side.
    • Verification: All commitments include objective, third-party or technical confirmation (IAEA, ICRC, UN, maritime data, satellite analytics).
    • Transparency: Public reporting on implementation milestones, with redactions only for legitimate operational security.