MoU’s $300bn Iran reconstruction fund becomes US political flashpoint
Key takeaways
- Trump says US will not pay for planned fund as part of Iran Mo U, as lawmakers connect price tag to affordability issues.
- Trump and Vice President JD Vance both sought to reassure on Thursday that the commitment would not be funded by US taxpayers.
- It left the “mechanism for implementation” to be decided over a 60-day negotiation period, with the US committing to grant any needed licences, sanctions waivers or other permissions.
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
Trump says US will not pay for planned fund as part of Iran Mo U, as lawmakers connect price tag to affordability issues.
xwhatsapp-strokecopylinkgoogle Add Al Jazeera on Googleinfo US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters in Orly, France, on June 17 [Anna Moneymaker/Getty]By Al Jazeera Staff Published On 18 Jun 202618 Jun 2026A provision in a memorandum of understanding (Mo U) to end the US-Israel war with Iran has become the latest political flashpoint in Washington, with President Donald Trump defending the commitment to create a $300bn reconstruction plan for Iran.
Trump and Vice President JD Vance both sought to reassure on Thursday that the commitment would not be funded by US taxpayers. Still, several Democrats and a handful of Republicans have seized on the planned fund at a time when affordability and economic populism have dominated the country’s electoral politics.