G7领导人及全球各国静待美伊协议细节明朗


2026-06-16T04:00:08.290Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/16/politics/g7-us-iran-agreement-details-uncertainty

  • 参加G7峰会的世界各国领导人仍不清楚唐纳德·特朗普总统与伊朗达成的协议的关键细节。
  • 这份长达一页半的文本尚未对外公布,华盛顿和德黑兰就协议条款发表的声明相互矛盾。
  • 周二在G7框架内与埃及、卡塔尔和阿联酋领导人举行的会晤,可能会为厘清协议细节提供又一次机会。

本文由AI生成摘要,并经CNN编辑审核。

瑞士日内瓦电——

当地时间周一傍晚,在俯瞰湛蓝日内瓦湖岸的露天晚宴上,全球最强大国家的领导人希望能搞清楚特朗普总统与伊朗达成的新协议究竟包含哪些内容。

近两个小时后,太阳即将落山。据两名知情官员透露,至少部分领导人离开定制搭建的晚宴会场时,对协议细节的困惑程度和入场时毫无二致。

特朗普在周日通过线上形式签署协议后仅一天,这份协议的确切条款仍只有少数几人知晓。双方都未公布这份正式签署的一页半文本,导致华盛顿和德黑兰不时发布相互矛盾的声明。就连特朗普政府内部的官员,对该计划的运作方式也给出了略有不同的解读。

目前尚不清楚在美国副总统JD·万斯预计于周五出席瑞士正式签署仪式之前,这些疑问能否得到澄清。据一名美国高级官员透露,这份备忘录文本将在该日期前公布,计划以“透明度”为名,在正式公开前一两天公布文件的具体时间线。

但短短几小时后,与法国总统埃马纽埃尔·马克龙同席的特朗普给出了不同的公布时限。
“我希望这份协议能尽快公布,”特朗普说,“我觉得会在周五之后的某个时间。”

马克龙以及其他聚集在阿尔卑斯度假胜地埃维昂莱班的G7领导人,当然希望能在此之前一睹协议内容。尽管他们都对特朗普促成协议一事表达了热烈祝贺,但包括他们在内的谈判方以外的所有人,似乎都尚未阅读过协议文本。

在周一早上的电视采访中万斯意外表态之前,外界甚至都不清楚这份文件是否已经签署。一名美国政府高级官员称,伊朗议会议长、首席谈判代表穆罕默德·巴盖尔·加利巴夫代表伊朗签署了协议;该官员还称,最高领袖穆赫塔巴·哈梅内伊“根本不会在这类协议上签字”。

周二在日内瓦湖畔豪华酒店举行的会晤,将为厘清协议细节提供又一次机会。马克龙邀请了埃及、卡塔尔和阿联酋的领导人与G7领导人共进午餐并展开讨论。这些国家的官员,尤其是卡塔尔方面,深度参与了谈判进程。美国预计海湾国家将为伊朗3000亿美元的重建基金承担部分费用。

周一的晚宴主题为“携手应对重大国际挑战”。特朗普被安排在马克龙和英国首相基尔·斯塔默之间就座。过去几个月来,特朗普一直在抨击这两位领导人在伊朗冲突期间未承担起责任,甚至在某些场合公开质疑他此前的决策。

特朗普的助手们在峰会前表示,他们预计欧洲国家将在当前冲突结束后,协助清除霍尔木兹海峡的水雷——法国和英国均表示愿意参与此事。

但由于不清楚协议的具体内容,部分欧洲官员称,在未了解协议如何解决海峡未来问题的情况下,他们很难做出承诺并付诸实施。

这种保密性甚至引发了特朗普部分保守派盟友的担忧,他们不清楚特朗普究竟签署了什么内容。
“我已经问了好几天了,为什么我们民众不能看到这份该死的谅解备忘录?不是通过匿名人士简报的方式。老实说,我从未见过这种情况。如果这真的是有利于和平的重大成果,那就把它公之于众,”保守派评论员马克·莱文在X平台上写道。特朗普经常称赞莱文及其福克斯新闻周末节目。

由于没有公开文本可供查阅,公众对协议的理解也出现了分歧。

以霍尔木兹海峡为例,特朗普宣称该航道将“永久免费通行”。但伊朗方面坚称,他们将管控该航道,并在必要时收取通行费。作为协议另一方的美国签署人万斯则表示,尽管美国“期望”海峡无需缴纳通行费,但最终决定权将在未来的谈判中敲定。
“这类问题将在技术谈判中得到解决,”万斯在接受美国全国广播公司财经频道采访时说,这是他为推销协议、解释协议内容而进行的一系列电视采访的首场。

通行费问题并非预计将在即将举行的“技术谈判”中敲定的唯一议题。伊朗核计划的命运同样如此:如何处理其近1000磅接近武器级别的铀或其精密离心机,以及将允许实施何种核查措施。

特朗普的助手坚称,伊朗只有在履行协议条款后才能获得任何金融救济。但由于仍有大量内容有待谈判,就连美国官员也不清楚伊朗需要采取哪些步骤才能满足美国的要求。
“制裁解除并非与某一特定行为挂钩,”一名美国政府高级官员周一表示,“而是与他们整体上的行为更得体挂钩。”

“行为更得体”的判定方式和时间并未明确说明。但另一名政府官员暗示,作为双方建立信任的措施,可能会相对较快地采取一些经济救济步骤。
“如果他们向我们做出一些小姿态,表明他们愿意履行承诺,那么我们一开始也会做出一些类似的小姿态,”该官员表示,他提到解除制裁和解冻伊朗资产是正在考虑的潜在“姿态”。

美国希望其能为伊朗重建基金出资的许多海湾国家,将派代表出席周二在日内瓦举行的扩大峰会会谈。

其中一名官员将该倡议描述为“拉拢其他国家进行投资”。

G7 leaders — and the rest of the world — wait for clarity on US-Iran agreement

2026-06-16T04:00:08.290Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/16/politics/g7-us-iran-agreement-details-uncertainty

  • World leaders at the G7 summit remain uncertain about key details of President Donald Trump’s agreement with Iran.
  • The one-and-a-half page text has not been released publicly and there have been contradictory statements from Washington and Tehran about its terms.
  • A Tuesday meeting with the rulers of Egypt, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates at the G7 could offer another chance at clarity.

AI-generated summary was reviewed by a CNN editor.

Geneva, Switzerland—

Heading into an al fresco dinner Monday evening overlooking the azure Lake Geneva shoreline, the leaders of the world’s most powerful nations were hoping to gain clarity on what, exactly, President Donald Trump’s new arrangement with Iran entailed.

After almost two hours, the sun had nearly set. At least some of the leaders walked away from the custom-built dinner pavilion just as mystified about the details of the plan as they were walking in, according to two officials familiar with the matter.

A day after Trump applied his electronic signature to the agreement, the exact terms of the pact remain known to only a few. Neither side has published the one-and-a-half page text that was formalized in the virtual signing Sunday, leading to sometimes contradictory statements from Washington and Tehran. Even officials inside Trump’s government offered slightly different takes on how the plan would work.

Whether any of those matters are clarified by the time Vice President JD Vance is expected to attend a formal signing ceremony in Switzerland on Friday remains to be seen. In the telling of one senior US official, the text of the memorandum will be released well before that date, laying out a timeline of a day or two before the document is finally revealed publicly in the name of “transparency.”

But a few hours later, Trump, sitting alongside French President Emmanuel Macron, offered a different deadline.

“I want it to be released. So probably pretty soon,” Trump said. “I would say some time after Friday.”

Macron and other Group of 7 leaders who have assembled in the alpine resort Évian-les-Bains would certainly like to take a glimpse of the agreement before then. Neither they nor anyone else outside the negotiating parties appear to have read the text, despite offering hearty congratulations to Trump for helping secure it.

Before a stray comment from Vance in a Monday morning television interview, it wasn’t even clear whether the document had been signed at all. A senior administration official said Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Iran’s parliament speaker and top negotiator, signed for Iran; Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, this official claimed, “just doesn’t sign these agreements.”

Tuesday’s meetings at a luxury hotel perched above Lake Geneva will offer another chance at clarity. Macron has invited the rulers of Egypt, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates to join in a lunchtime discussion with the G7 leaders. Officials from those countries, and Qatar in particular, have been intimately involved in the negotiating process. And the US expects Gulf nations to help foot the bill for a $300 billion reconstruction fund for Iran.

Monday’s dinner was billed as a meal focused on “working together to address major international challenges.” Trump was seated between Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, two leaders he’s spent the last several months excoriating for not stepping up during the Iran war and, in some cases, openly questioning his decision-making beforehand.

Trump’s aides said heading into the summit they expected European nations to step up to help remove mines from the Strait of Hormuz now that active conflict has ended — something France and Britain have both said they’d be willing to do.

But without clarity on what has been agreed to, some European officials said it would be difficult to make commitments and implement them without knowing more of how the agreement addresses the future of the strait.

The secrecy has led to alarm even among some of Trump’s conservative allies about what, exactly, he signed off on.

“I have asked for days, why can’t we, the people, see the damn MOU? Not through people briefed by an anonymous person. Honestly, I’ve never seen anything like this. If it is a great outcome for peace, then release it,” conservative commentator Mark Levin wrote on X. The president has frequently praised Levin and his weekend show on Fox News.

Without a public text to read from, gaps in public understanding of the agreement have also emerged.

On the Strait of Hormuz, for instance, Trump declared the waterway would operate “permanently toll-free.” But the Iranians insisted they would control the passage and apply fees if necessary. And Vance, the other American signatory to the accord, said while the US “expectation” was a strait without tolls, a final determination would only come during future talks.

“That’s the sort of thing that we’re going to figure out in these technical negotiations,” Vance said on CNBC, the first in a string of television interviews he did to try to sell the agreement and explain its contents.

The tolls are not the only issue that’s expected to be ironed out in the forthcoming “technical negotiations.” So, too, will the fate of Iran’s nuclear program: what to do with its nearly 1,000 pounds of near-bomb-grade uranium or its sophisticated centrifuges, and what inspections will be allowed.

Trump’s aides insist Iran will not see any financial relief until complying with its side of the bargain. But with so much left to negotiate, it wasn’t clear even to US officials what steps Tehran would need to take to satisfy American demands.

“Sanctions relief is not tied specifically to any particular conduct,” a senior administration official said Monday. “It’s tied generally to them behaving more appropriately.”

How and when “behaving more appropriately” would be determined wasn’t specified. But a separate administration official hinted there could be steps toward economic relief taken relatively quickly as confidence building measures for both sides.

“We’ll do some small gestures of that in the beginning, if they make some small gestures to us that show that they’re willing to meet their commitments,” the official said, citing sanctions relief and unfreezing Iranian assets as potential “gestures” under consideration.

Many of the Gulf nations that the US hopes will invest in a reconstruction fund will be represented at Tuesday’s expanded summit talks in Geneva.

One of the officials described the initiative as “corralling other countries to make investments.”

评论

发表回复

您的邮箱地址不会被公开。 必填项已用 * 标注