National & Local

U.S. Sends Iran 15-Point Ceasefire Plan — What It Means for San Diego's Military Families

By Santee Pulse Staff · Published March 25, 2026 · 3 min read

The United States presented Iran with a 15-point ceasefire proposal Wednesday, the latest development in a conflict that has directly touched San Diego's military community since hostilities began weeks ago.

The plan, delivered through Pakistani intermediaries, calls on Iran to dismantle its nuclear capabilities, permanently halt uranium enrichment, cease funding and arms shipments to allied militant groups, and guarantee the Strait of Hormuz remains open to international shipping. In exchange, Washington offered to provide full sanctions relief and support for Iran's civilian nuclear energy program at the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant.

Iranian officials publicly denied any direct negotiations were underway, with the Foreign Ministry saying the U.S. was "negotiating with itself." President Trump, meanwhile, claimed productive indirect talks were in progress and that Iran "badly" wanted to make a deal.

For San Diego, the stakes are high. The USS Boxer — a Wasp-class amphibious assault ship carrying approximately 2,500 Marines — departed San Diego in the week prior as part of a broader U.S. deployment to the Middle East. MCAS Miramar and Camp Pendleton remain on heightened operational alert, and thousands of East County military families are tracking developments in real time.

Gas prices at San Diego-area stations have surged with the conflict — in part due to pressure on energy markets through the Strait of Hormuz — and have topped record levels in recent weeks. A genuine ceasefire could begin to ease that pressure. For now, analysts say any resolution remains uncertain, and the conflict's trajectory will continue to shape daily life in San Diego's military communities.

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