Internet reacts to $300B reconstruction fund in Iran deal
U.S. Vice President JD Vance attends UFC Freedom 250 on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 15, 2026. REUTERS/Evan Vucci REFILE - CORRECTING DATE FROM JUNE 14 TO JUNE 15.

Vice President JD Vance confirmed in a CBS interview, Iran could access a $300 billion reconstruction fund as part of the U.S. and Iran peace agreement, funded by the Gulf Cooperation Council Coalition.

Vance argued, Tehran hard-liners would emphasize benefits while downplaying required concessions on nuclear programs and oversight.

The revelation sparked immediate criticism on social media.

University of Wisconsin-Madison statistics professor Karl Rohe noted, "Can we talk about the scale of problems that are going to arise from spending 300 billion? This is 500%-600% larger than the entire annual budget of the Iranian govt. It is one year of Iranian GDP *of the ENTIRE COUNTRY.* This is insane."

Analysts highlighted the contradiction with President Donald Trump's earlier claims that Iran would receive no money.

"We are going to pay Iran $300 billion to rebuild from the war we started. Wrap your head around that when they claim that Trump is a master negotiator," Fred Wellman, a U.S. Army veteran and Lincoln Project communications strategist, wrote on X.

Critics characterized the reconstruction fund as significantly exceeding Obama-era concessions to Iran.

Watch the video below.