Outstanding Nuclear Issue to be Tackled in US Iran Final Deal on Friday
in Geneva
President
Trump is under pressure to significantly improve upon the Obama-era deal in
order to justify the huge human and economic cost of taking the United States
to war.
·
U.S.
President Donald Trump
is under pressure to negotiate an Iran nuclear agreement that significantly
improves on the 2015 deal reached by Barack
Obama.
·
Trump
has repeatedly criticized the Obama-era nuclear agreement, calling it weak and
arguing that it paved the way for Iran to eventually develop nuclear weapons.
·
The
current U.S.-Iran understanding is only a ceasefire and a 60-day agreement to
reopen the Strait of Hormuz, with detailed nuclear negotiations still to begin.
·
Unlike
the 2015 accord, key issues remain unresolved, including:
o
Iran’s
existing stockpile of highly enriched uranium.
o
Future
uranium enrichment activities.
o
Oversight
and inspections of nuclear facilities.
o
Iran’s
missile program.
o
Support
for groups such as Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis.
·
Vice
President JD Vance
has acknowledged that difficult negotiations lie ahead.
·
Nuclear
talks are scheduled to begin in Switzerland, where both sides will attempt to
negotiate a broader agreement.
·
Experts
note that today's challenge is greater than in 2015 because Iran now possesses
uranium enriched to 60%, much closer to weapons-grade levels.
·
Former
U.S. negotiator Wendy
Sherman argued that the current administration still needs a
larger team of technical, legal, energy, and inspection experts to handle the
negotiations effectively.
·
Trump
administration officials believe military pressure and recent strikes on
Iranian nuclear facilities give Washington stronger leverage than the Obama
administration had.
·
However,
Iran retains significant leverage through its ability to disrupt shipping in
the Strait of Hormuz and threaten critical infrastructure across the Gulf
region.
·
Critics
point out that many issues Trump once criticized in the Obama deal—including
missiles, regional militias, and long-term restrictions—have not yet been
addressed in the current framework.
·
Trump
has suggested a possible 15–20 year suspension of Iranian enrichment
activities, but no final agreement exists yet.
Key Takeaway
While
Trump argues that his approach will produce a stronger agreement than the 2015
Obama nuclear deal, the current arrangement is only a preliminary framework.
The real test will be whether upcoming negotiations can secure lasting limits
on Iran’s nuclear program, missile capabilities, and regional activities while
justifying the costs of the recent conflict.
[ABS
News Service/17.06.2026]
Only minutes into a phone call to a New
York Times reporter to explain the deal he had just agreed to with Iran,
President Trump turned to an issue that clearly grates on him: the comparisons
to the deal that President Barack Obama struck with Tehran in 2015.
The Obama deal, he said on Sunday
evening, repeating a well-worn line, was “a disaster.”
“It was a road to a nuclear weapon and
ours is a wall against a nuclear weapon in the truest sense of the word,” Mr.
Trump said. “So let’s start there.”
Mr. Trump’s sensitivity is easy to
understand. He campaigned against the Obama-era deal as far back as 2015, and
ultimately killed it during his first term over the objections of many of his
top national security aides. At the time, he had a long list of complaints
about its failings. The 2015 accord “lifted crippling economic sanctions on
Iran in exchange for very weak limits on the regime’s nuclear activity,” Mr.
Trump said in a 2018 speech, and “no limits at all on its other malign
behavior,” especially its support of terror activities around the Middle East.
Many of Mr. Trump’s critiques were
justified, and often shared by Democrats. But now, Mr. Trump is caught in what
could best be described as the Obama-deal bind.
The accord he described on Sunday is
simply a cease-fire and an agreement to fully open the Strait of Hormuz for 60
days. It commits both sides to begin negotiating on the future of the nuclear
program. So for now, there is no way to compare the old and new deals; they are
completely different in nature.
Yet Mr. Trump clearly knows he must
significantly improve upon Mr. Obama’s results in order to justify the huge
human and economic cost of taking the United States to war over the past three
months. Now comes the test.
The 2015 deal resulted in shipping about
97 percent of Iran’s nuclear stockpile at the time out of the country. The fate
of the current stockpile, a far more dangerous one, is undetermined. There is
no resolution about how to deal with future nuclear research and enrichment
activities inside Iran, or whether all of its major nuclear sites will be shut
down. There is no discussion yet about limits on its missiles or of resumed
support for what is left of militias it supports, such as Hamas, Hezbollah and
the Houthis.
Vice President JD Vance has acknowledged
the scope of the tasks ahead, which begin Friday in Switzerland as soon as he
and Iran’s top parliamentarian conduct a ceremonial signing of the memorandum
of understanding. Mr. Trump insists that it won’t be that hard. “We have our
deal done with Iran,” Mr. Trump said Tuesday at a Group of 7 summit in France.
“It goes to a second stage, which I think will be actually easier.”
He may be the only one who thinks so. The
2015 deal took 18 months to negotiate. It is more than 150 pages long, filled
with specific benchmarks of progress and technical annexes, including pages on
how the nuclear program was to be monitored and inspected.
“What he has to do is even harder than
what we had to do in 2015, because we did not have to deal with a stockpile of
uranium close to what is needed for a nuclear weapon,” said Wendy Sherman, who
led the 2015 negotiating team. And, Ms. Sherman argued, the Trump
administration has yet to assemble the kind of team they will require: “You
need lawyers, Treasury experts, energy experts, inspection experts.”
In fact, in the run-up to the 2015
negotiations, the hotels where the accord was being hammered out were jammed
with such expertise. That included Ernest Moniz, the energy secretary who was
also a nuclear weapons expert; the C.I.A.’s chief of Iran intelligence; and
Americans who had worked with inspection teams from the International Atomic
Energy Agency.
With a 60-day sprint ahead, beginning
Friday, to reach a deal, Mr. Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff, and his
son-in-law, Jared Kushner, have clearly been racing to assemble a similar team.
A few weeks ago they visited the Oak Ridge National Laboratory for a day with
nuclear experts on such arcana as what kind of equipment would be required to
recover the 60-percent enriched uranium and “downblend,”
or dilute, it. They are expected to be nearby as talks begin in Switzerland.
The Iranians are hardly showing up
unprepared. The foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, who is the main interlocutor
with Mr. Witkoff, was the No. 2 Iranian official at the talks 11 years ago. At
that time, he often briefed reporters, and it was evident that he had an
encyclopedic knowledge of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, from its uranium
mining operations to its enrichment facilities at Natanz and Fordo, to the
critical operations at Isfahan, where Iran was developing the ability to turn
uranium to a metallic form — which could be fashioned into a warhead. (All
three sites were hit with American bunker-busting bombs or missiles a year ago
this weekend, in “Operation Midnight Hammer,” which left many of Iran’s most
critical nuclear facilities under rubble.)
Mr. Trump’s national security team is
brimming with confidence, at least in public, that when negotiations start up,
they will hold cards the Obama team never enjoyed.
“Obama, they begged Iran for a deal,”
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth argued on CBS News’s “Face the Nation” on
Sunday. “We bombed Iran, and then put in a blockade,” he said, and resumed
bombing a week ago “to ensure that they come to the table for a great deal.” He
insisted that the American military would remain offshore to make sure the
Iranians “live up to what they said they would do.”
“They didn’t have the threat of military
force the way that we do,” Mr. Hegseth said of the Obama team.
Mr. Trump picked up on that theme in his
call on Sunday, saying, “I believe they have had enough,” and noting that the
Iranians had been hit by two waves of American attacks. “We were going in for
the big one,” he said, adding: “And we made a deal right after that.”
What Mr. Trump and Mr. Hegseth left out
of their account is that the Iranians have plenty of cards of their own this
time that they lacked 11 years ago. They have discovered a diplomatic
superpower: the ability to shut down the Strait of Hormuz just by dropping a
few mines and launching a few drones. That is enough to make shipowners and
captains hesitate before taking the risk of running through the narrow
waterway. The Iranians also have shown they can reach and destroy water
desalination plants, American radar arrays and petrochemical plants across the
region.
And back in 2015, the most potent nuclear
material Iran possessed was enriched to only 20 percent purity, which would
have required weeks or months of further enrichment to be useful in a bomb. Now
they have 60 percent enriched fuel, which can be turned into bomb-grade in days
or weeks — if they can dig it out of the rubble of Isfahan without getting
caught.
In his interview, Mr. Trump repeatedly
came back to the Obama accord, stating incorrectly that it would have “allowed
them to enrich all the way up to a nuclear weapon.” In fact, it limited
enrichment to 3.67 percent, which is used for reactors, not atomic weapons. But
one of the flaws of the Obama accord, as Mr. Trump noted in the 2016
presidential campaign, is that it allowed the Iranians to keep working on
next-generation centrifuges and conducting very limited enrichment.
And the Obama deal was designed to expire
in 2030. Mr. Trump talked in the interview about the possibility of agreeing to
a 15-to-20-year suspension of enrichment activities in the coming negotiations,
meaning the deal would essentially lift restrictions between 2041 and 2046.
That would buy some time. But buying time was the strategy of the Obama deal as
well.
The real challenge for Mr. Trump may be
getting past his own rhetoric — including that speech in 2018 that took on Mr.
Obama’s deal for what it failed to accomplish.
The 2015 agreement had plenty of flaws.
The Iranians refused to negotiate over the size of their missile arsenal or its
range. The new memorandum of understanding is apparently silent on the topic,
so the issue will have to be dealt with in the next round of negotiations.
The 2015 deal did not prevent Iran from
funding terror groups. There is also apparently nothing in the memorandum on
that topic, or of its treatment of protesters and dissidents to whom Mr. Trump
promised, earlier this year, “help is on the way.” (In a social media post on
Jan. 13, he also urged them to “take over your institutions.”)
In his call on Sunday, Mr. Trump insisted
that Iran would only get sanctions relief if it changed its behavior, including
refraining from shooting protesters. But he also indicated he was in no hurry
to seize that uranium or get it out of the country. Sitting under the rubble,
he noted, it poses no imminent threat.
So the big question is whether there will
be a follow-on deal at all. “He hasn’t gotten to the second part of anything —
in Ukraine or Gaza,” said Ms. Sherman, who went on to be deputy secretary of
state under President Joseph R. Biden Jr.
But if he does go the distance, if he
successfully negotiates every concession he insists
the Iranians are now ready to make in return for financial incentives, then he
may well have an accord that goes well beyond the 2015 deal.
He just doesn’t have it yet.