Your lies are easily found by a browser's built in AI: Is Trump giving Iran cash?
No, the Trump administration maintains that the United States is not providing direct cash to Iran. President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance have explicitly denied reports that the U.S. is paying Iran $300 billion or any other direct sum, labeling such claims as "Fake News."
Instead, the agreement involves conditional economic benefits tied to Iran’s compliance with ceasefire and nuclear obligations:
Frozen Assets: Iran may gain access to its own frozen funds (reported as $25 billion) through direct transfers or credit lines, rather than receiving new U.S. taxpayer money.
Reconstruction Fund: A potential $300 billion reconstruction investment fund is described as being funded by the Gulf Cooperation Council (regional allies like Saudi Arabia and the UAE), not the U.S. government.
Sanctions Relief: The U.S. will lift sanctions on Iranian oil exports to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, allowing Iran to generate revenue through global markets once it meets its deal obligations.
Performance-Based: Vice President Vance emphasized that no funds are released simply for signing the deal; financial benefits flow only after Iran fulfills its commitments, such as halting military operations in Lebanon and freezing nuclear activities.