$300 Billion Iran Investment Fund Details: More Than Half Already Pledged

$300 Billion Iran Investment Fund Details Emerge from US-Iran Framework Agreement

Iran – (Web Desk) – A $300 billion Iran investment fund details have emerged from the US-Iran framework agreement, with more than half the money already pledged by private companies around the world.

The fund is called the Reconstruction and Development Fund. It is not government money. No grants or war reparations are included. Companies from the United States, Gulf Arab states, South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia, South America, and Africa have all made commitments.

Investments cover energy, logistics, manufacturing, and transport. Iran originally asked for $400 billion as war compensation. The US refused. This private fund was then proposed as an alternative.

The fund will only become active once a final deal is signed. During the next 60 days, fund administrators will work with Iranian officials and investors to plan specific projects. These include refineries, airports, the Mobarakeh Steel complex, and other damaged infrastructure.

US Vice President JD Vance confirmed the fund publicly. He said Iran could access the money if it dismantles its nuclear programme, eliminates enriched material, and agrees to strict inspections.

Pakistan helped mediate the investment fund deal. Iran’s foreign ministry has not yet commented officially.

Iran holds the world’s second-largest natural gas reserves and the fourth-largest oil reserves. It has a population of over 92 million and has had almost no foreign investment for 40 years due to sanctions.

President Trump called reports about the fund “Fake News” on social media, though senior US officials and Vance had already confirmed the basic structure.

The 60-day memorandum signed this week is a framework only. Full negotiations on nuclear, sanctions, and security issues will continue separately.

May June 2026 Behter pak

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