Trump says Iran agrees not to develop or acquire nuclear weapons, as US seizes $1B in Iranian-linked crypto

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President Donald Trump announced on May 6, 2026 that Iran had agreed not to develop or acquire nuclear weapons, framing the commitment as a major step forward in ongoing negotiations between Washington and Tehran. The declaration, made during public addresses, comes amid a broader diplomatic push that has included military strikes, ceasefire proposals, and, perhaps most relevant to crypto markets, the seizure of approximately $1 billion in Iranian-linked cryptocurrency assets.

That last number is worth sitting with. A billion dollars in crypto, confiscated as part of sanctions enforcement. It followed an earlier action that froze around $344 million in similar digital assets.

The deal that isn’t quite a deal yet

Here’s the thing about Trump’s announcement. He expressed optimism about a potential agreement but acknowledged that a final deal had yet to be confirmed by the Iranian side. As of late May 2026, the status of a formal agreement remained pending.

The negotiations are part of wider discussions tied to a ceasefire in the US-Iran conflict, which has seen renewed tensions throughout 2026. Trump has proposed a 60-day pause in fighting as part of the framework, and emphasized that any agreement would include strict conditions on Iran’s enriched uranium production.

For context, the last major attempt at an Iran nuclear deal, the JCPOA signed in 2015, took over two years of intensive multilateral negotiations. Trump withdrew the US from that agreement in 2018 during his first term.

$1.3 billion in crypto seizures and what it means

The combined crypto enforcement actions, roughly $1 billion seized plus the earlier $344 million frozen, total approximately $1.3 billion in Iranian-linked digital assets targeted by US authorities.

Bitcoin’s geopolitical premium

Bitcoin has been climbing toward $74,000 during this period. Geopolitical uncertainty has historically pushed capital toward assets perceived as safe havens, and Bitcoin has increasingly joined gold in that category.

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