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THU · 2026-06-25 · 09:43 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0625-87298
News/US says Iran will buy its goods: What could US-Iran trade lo…
NSR-2026-0625-87298Analysis·EN·Economic Impact

US says Iran will buy its goods: What could US-Iran trade look like?

The US states that unfrozen Iranian assets will be used to purchase American agricultural products, potentially boosting bilateral trade to $12 billion. This plan is part of ongoing negotiations for a peace deal to end the war in the Middle East.

Yashraj SharmaAl JazeeraFiled 2026-06-25 · 09:43 GMTLean · CenterRead · 6 min
US says Iran will buy its goods: What could US-Iran trade look like?
Al JazeeraFIG 01
Reading time
6min
Word count
1 291words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
7entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

The US states that unfrozen Iranian assets will be used to purchase American agricultural products, potentially boosting bilateral trade to $12 billion. This plan is part of ongoing negotiations for a peace deal to end the war in the Middle East. While US Vice President JD Vance and President Trump insist these funds will exclusively buy US goods like corn and soybeans for Iran, Iranian officials have not confirmed this agreement. Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman stated that Iran will have "absolute liberty" to decide how to use the released assets, and any agricultural purchases would be based on price and quality, not US dictates. Analysts suggest that imposing spending conditions on frozen assets could lead to prolonged negotiations and that the US motive may be to gain domestic political favor.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 5Entities 7
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Economic Impact
Diplomatic
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
3
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

The US Treasury is releasing money/sanctions into escrow controlled by the USA for food and medical supplies from the US.

quotePresident Trump
Confidence
0.90
02

President Trump stated that corn, soybeans, and other needed items will be bought from US farmers.

quotePresident Trump
Confidence
0.90
03

Iran's top negotiator stated an agreement was reached to release $12bn in frozen Iranian funds.

quoteMohammed Bagher Ghalibaf
Confidence
0.90
04

The US says unfrozen Iranian assets will be used to buy US agricultural products for Iran.

quoteUS Vice President JD Vance
Confidence
0.90
05

The US-Iran trade could translate into a $12 billion boost for bilateral trade.

prediction
Confidence
0.70
§ 04

Full report

6 min read · 1 291 words
EXPLAINERBefore the 1979 revolution in Iran, Washington and Tehran had close trade ties. Analysts tell us if a peace deal can revive them.The US vice president looks on as Iran's foreign minister shakes hands with Pakistan's prime minister before the start of talks in Switzerland, June 21, 2026 [Nathan Howard/Reuters]Published On 25 Jun 2026The United States says it has come up with a spending plan for unfrozen Iranian assets, as negotiations to reach a final deal to end the war in the Middle East continue.President Donald Trump’s administration insists that the unfrozen money will be used to buy US agricultural products, which will then be provided to Iran.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4Can US-Iran peace ‘deal’ survive Israeli bombing of Lebanon?list 2 of 4What does Pakistan stand to gain from helping broker the US-Iran deal?list 3 of 4Why does Israel want to be less dependent on US weapons?list 4 of 4Trump White House requests $87.6bn in spending, including for Iran warend of listUltimately, that could translate into a $12 billion shot in the arm for the currently heavily restricted bilateral trade between the US and Iran, which is largely confined to humanitarian goods.From being close trading partners to arch rivals over the past five decades, the US-Iran relationship has all but petered out.However outlandish the idea may seem, can Trump restore trade ties with Tehran?Iran’s Speaker of Parliament, Mohammed Bagher Ghalibaf (L), and Minister of Foreign Affairs Abbas Araghchi (C), at the Burgenstock talks in Switzerland, 21 June 2026 [Urs Flueeler/EPA]What is happening to Iran’s frozen assets?As is the case with many things in the US-Iran negotiations, the two sides do not appear fully aligned on what has been agreed so far.After the first round of talks in Switzerland on Monday, following the signing of the US-Iran memorandum of understanding (MoU) last week, Iran’s top negotiator, Mohammed Bagher Ghalibaf, said an agreement had been reached to release $12bn in frozen Iranian funds.But US Vice President JD Vance said if Iranian assets are unfrozen, they will be used by Iran to buy US agricultural products. “They’re going to go to make American farmers richer and feed the Iranian people,” he said.President Trump added: “We’re doing very well in terms of negotiating a fair and reasonable deal. … corn, soybeans, all of the things they need are going to be bought from our farmers. So our farmers are very happy. I’ve had a lot of calls; they were very happy about this.”Next day, Trump posted on Truth Social: “The Money and/or Sanctions that the U.S. Treasury is releasing goes into escrow, controlled by the U.S.A., and will be used for the purchase of food and medical supplies, exclusively from the United States, including Corn, Wheat, and Soybeans from our great American Farmers. These are things that are desperately needed by Iran.”“This is a humanitarian crisis, and I feel it is necessary to help, NOW, before it is too late. Talks are going well!”Iran has not confirmed that it has agreed to this at all, however.Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said the assets “will be released and will be employed with absolute liberty by Iran in order to purchase whatever goods or commodities needed by the nation”.He added that any agricultural purchases would be based on “prices and quality’’, not terms “dictated by Washington”.“It is interesting that the philosophy and goal of the war, which was the destruction of the Iranian civilisation and the collapse of Iran, has become enriching American farmers,” Baghaei said.Iran’s ambassador in Geneva, Ali Bahreini, also rejected the US contention, saying “Iran is the only country that decides what to do with those assets”.A wall map in Tehran with images of some of the dead in the Israeli-US war, June 17, 2026 [Atta Kenare/AFP]How will this be agreed?Gary Hufbauer, a non-resident senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said: “Any attempt to put spending conditions on unfrozen Iranian assets will lead to lengthy negotiations.”In reality, he told Al Jazeera, “lots of Congressmen oppose the Iran deal, and multinational companies will be wary of another political flare-up and credit risk in doing business with Iran”.Mohammad Reza Farzanegan, a professor and economist at Germany’s Philipps-Universitat Marburg, said the US president has a strong motive to force Iran to buy US goods: “To extract something positive for his reputation in this illegal war against Iran”.Farmers in the US, especially soybean exporters, have been hurt by Trump’s trade war with China, the economist said. “Redirecting Iranian frozen assets towards US agricultural purchases would allow Washington to frame sanctions relief as humanitarian trade. But in reality, it is a move to improve his popularity among his social support base in the US,” he said.Cullen Hendrix, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, a Washington-based think tank, said the US proposal could also be a way of “avoiding the straightforward transfer of funds to Iran, which would scan as a capitulation by the US”.Do the US and Iran trade at all?Yes. Despite sour relations and decades of sanctions, Washington and Tehran maintain a small but persistent trade relationship with a trade surplus heavily in the US’s favour.Direct trade remains tiny by international standards because broad US sanctions restrict most commercial activity. Most of what is traded is concentrated in humanitarian and sanction-exempted sectors such as medicines, medical equipment and agricultural products.According to the US government, total US-Iran goods and services trade totalled $838m in 2024, a three percent increase from 2023.Of that, the vast majority – $742m was in the form of services – of which nearly $600m was trade flowing from the US to Iran. Of the goods traded – almost all were American items being exported to Iran.A banner in Tehran showing hands firmly holding Iranian flags as a sign of patriotism, Jan. 14, 2026 [Vahid Salemi/AP]Could a peace deal revive US-Iran trade ties?Re-establishing a broad trading relationship would be a stretch, analysts told Al Jazeera, as neither Washington nor Tehran appears willing to try to sell such an arrangement at home.However, there are some areas in which the two sides could potentially meet in the middle.Hendrix told Al Jazeera that if Tehran “were to begin large purchases of agricultural products, they would likely target corn and soy, but not in a way that would durably shift Iran to greater dependence on US exports”.Since the kinetic part of the war is not completely over – both sides have said they are ready to resume all-out war if talks fail – even “the US’s own allies are trepidatious about putting all their eggs in the US basket. As an adversary, the logic of minimising reliance on the US is even more compelling”, Hendrix said.Even if Tehran is forced to make some purchases of American goods, he added, Iran “is not going to hardwire dependence on US exports into its food system. The US should expect, at best, superficial, tactical compliance rather than becoming a pillar of Iranian food security”.Farzanegan told Al Jazeera that the realistic trading options between the US and Iran are limited: food, agricultural commodities, medicine, medical devices and some related chemical or health-sector products.“Agricultural trade could include wheat, corn, soybeans or soymeal, rice and animal feed, especially given Iran’s import needs,” he said, adding that the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization expects Iran to need to import around 22 million tonnes of cereals this year – which would already amount to a multi-billion dollar bill.Tehran could possibly export crude and refined petroleum products at competitive prices to the US, Hufbauer said.What is the history of US-Iran trade?Before the 1979 Islamic Revolution, Tehran was one of Washington’s closest allies in the Middle East, with trade expanding rapidly from the 1950s to the late 70s.
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Entities

7 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

8 terms
us-iran trade
1.00
unfrozen iranian assets
0.90
agricultural products
0.80
middle east war
0.70
peace deal
0.60
bilateral trade
0.50
donald trump
0.50
switzerland talks
0.40
§ 07

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