Stage 1: ✅ End War in 30 Days Including in Lebanon ✅ Gradual Opening of the Strait of Hormuz, ✅ Lift U.S Blockade ✅ U.S. Military Withdrawal from Iran's Borders ✅ Iran to clear mines.
Stage 2: ✅ Complete Freeze on Uranium Enrichment for 15 Years. ✅ After 15 years Resume at 3.6% ✅ No storage of Enriched Uranium ✅ No Dismantling of nuclear infrastructure. ✅ Sanctions relief ✅ Frozen asset release tied directly to nuclear steps.
Stage 3; ✅ Iran-Arab strategic dialogue to build a regional security architecture ✅ Non-aggression commitment that covers Israel.
The next few hours are going to be CRITICAL for your portfolio. $BTC is testing the 'Make or Break' zone, and if we hold this level, the Monday morning pump will be legendary! 🚀
$BTC is heating up again, pushing toward $80K with strong resistance near $79K. The market is slowly turning risk-on, so on the surface it looks bullish… but not so fast.
What happens next is simple. A clean break above $79K can trigger a strong rally. A rejection from there can lead to a liquidity sweep.
The top scam coins are $LAB , $SKYAI , #UB , and $RAVE . If you go long or short on these coins, you'll lose all your money before they actually pump or dump.
Don’t believe in these coins.
What do you learn from them? Let’s share your opinion on these pump and dumps👇👇
$LAB token pumped 500% in just 2 days, adding $260 million to its market cap and liquidating $26.6 million in shorts.
It then dumped 84% in just 8 hours, wiping out over $250 million and liquidating $17 million in longs.
Majority of LAB supply is controlled by the team.
Here's how this manipulation playbook works:
- Make the supply float as low as possible - Start a pump, which will attract shorts. - Funding will flip negative and then push some spot demand, liquidating the shorts. - More shorts will enter, pushing funding to the max level. - Continue to liquidate these shorts and make massive profits. - Once retail believes the pump won't stop, start offloading supply. - Simultaneously, short the market and make profits from both short positions and spot dumps. - Meanwhile, retail first lost by going short and now lost by going long.
He's reviewing Iran's 14-point peace proposal, but warned strikes could resume if Tehran "misbehaves."
Iran keeps submitting proposals because it can't afford another round. Trump keeps the military option alive because it's the only thing keeping Iran at the table.
🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷 Iran's new 14-point proposal is on Trump's desk, and the structure changes everything...
According to two sources briefed on the proposal, Iran submitted a 14-point framework Thursday with a specific sequencing strategy.
Phase one: a one-month negotiation window to reach a deal that reopens Hormuz, ends the U.S. naval blockade, and permanently terminates the wars in Iran and Lebanon.
Phase two: only after that deal is reached, another month of negotiations on the nuclear program.
This is a smarter version of the proposal Trump rejected last week.
The earlier offer asked Trump to lift the blockade and shelve nuclear talks indefinitely.
The new offer builds in a hard deadline for nuclear negotiations to follow rather than disappear.
Iran is trying to give Trump enough sequencing for him to claim a comprehensive resolution while still front-loading the immediate economic relief Tehran desperately needs.
Trump's response is mixed.
Yesterday he said he's "not satisfied."
Earlier today before flying to Miami he said he'd review the proposal on the plane.
Then on Truth Social he wrote he "can't imagine that it would be acceptable" and added that Iran "has not yet paid a big enough price for what they have done to Humanity, and the World, over the last 47 years."
That's a reference to the Islamic Republic since 1979.
Putting that language into the negotiating posture suggests Trump is positioning for a more punitive approach rather than a transactional resolution.
🇮🇩 What if Indonesia charged ships in the Strait of Malacca?
The Strait is just 2.8 kilometers wide at its narrowest point, and nearly 25% of global trade passes through it, including around 16 million barrels of oil every day.
China moves about 60% of its oil through this route. Japan and South Korea rely on it for over 80%.
And yet, unlike the Suez Canal, which generates about $10 billion a year in transit fees, Malacca is essentially open.
Indonesia could be collecting $10-20 billion annually just by charging ships to pass.