The world may have just stepped back from the edge of something far bigger.

U.S. and Iranian negotiators have reportedly agreed on a draft 60-day ceasefire framework, while also reopening talks around Iran’s nuclear program. The deal is still waiting for final approval from President Trump and Iran’s leadership, but even this stage feels massive after everything that happened over the last few days.

Just recently, missiles were flying across the region. Oil markets were shaking hard. Fear was spreading that the Middle East could slip into a much wider war. Every headline felt heavier than the last.

Now suddenly, both sides are talking instead of firing.

According to reports, the framework could include reopening the Strait of Hormuz, protecting shipping routes, reducing military escalation, and possible sanctions relief tied to future negotiations. If this actually moves forward, it could become one of the biggest diplomatic shifts the region has seen in years.

And honestly, that’s what makes tonight feel so tense.

One signature could calm global markets, lower regional pressure, and stop the situation from spiraling further.

Or one rejection could send everything back into chaos within hours.

Nothing is official yet. The agreement is fragile. Trust between both sides is still thin. But for the first time in days, the conversation is no longer about the next strike.

It’s about whether the world is finally ready to step away from another major conflict.

$TRUMP