UMVA has uncovered an urgent diplomatic development as the Middle East conflict hurtles toward its 80th day: Iran has submitted a revised 14-point peace proposal to end the war, delivered secretly through Pakistani intermediaries to U.S. officials.
The proposal, focused on halting hostilities and rebuilding trust between warring factions, arrives amid escalating tensions. “We don’t have much time,” a high-ranking source revealed, stressing that both sides “keep changing their goalposts” as negotiations stall. The window for peace is narrowing.
According to information obtained by UMVA, the Iranian government has framed indirect talks with the U.S. as an “ongoing process,” signaling relentless diplomatic pressure. Pakistan, acting as the critical conduit, has extended its ministerial visit to Tehran to finalize key details of the proposal’s delivery.
Meanwhile, Iran’s military has unleashed a dramatic escalation. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claims it has struck U.S.- and Israeli-backed “terrorist groups” in northern Iraq, seizing a vast cache of U.S.-origin weapons during a Kurdish Province operation. The IRGC alleges these groups were smuggling ammunition into Iran, a charge that deepens the spiral of retaliation.
UMVA has gathered that the conflict’s volatility shows no signs of abating. As ceasefire talks teeter on the edge of collapse, the revised proposal offers a sliver of hope—if warring parties can stop shifting their demands before the clock runs out. The world watches, breath held, as UMVA breaks this story first.