Original Title: The Iran Deal Is Not a Deal. It Is a 60-Day Bet.
Original Author: Velina Tchakarova
Original Compilation: Peggy
Editor's Note: Substantial progress was made in the Iran truce negotiations over the weekend. According to AP reports, the US and Iran are close to an agreement: ending the war, reopening the Strait of Hormuz, Iran handing over its stockpile of highly enriched uranium, with specific conditions for sanction relief and asset unfreezing to be negotiated within a 60-day window.
However, this article argues that what is being referred to externally as the 'Iran deal' is not a genuine peace agreement, but rather a 60-day memorandum of understanding: During these 60 days, Iran will gradually clear the Strait of Hormuz, the US will lift its naval blockade on Iranian ports, Iran will receive sanctions waivers to sell oil, and the two sides will then proceed with follow-up negotiations on the nuclear issue.
But the author emphasizes that this arrangement merely freezes the conflict temporarily and does not resolve the real structural contradictions: whether Iran hands over its stockpile of highly enriched uranium, who ultimately controls the Strait of Hormuz, the sequence of sanctions relief versus nuclear concessions, and whether Israel will unilaterally sabotage the agreement are all unresolved issues. The article also suggests that China is indirectly participating in the mediation through Pakistan, aiming to restore Iranian oil flows and limit US dominance in the Gulf region; meanwhile, trade routes through places like Oman and the UAE also create loopholes in the US blockade.
Overall, the author's core judgment is: This agreement provides short-term political respite for both Trump and Tehran, but the real test is not on the signing day, but on the '61st day' after the 60-day window closes—when the irreconcilable contradictions between Iranian nuclear concessions, control of Hormuz, and US sanctions relief will resurface.
The original text follows:
What happened this weekend has one version that looks like a breakthrough: a US President announcing a war is 'basically settled'; a Pakistani general shuttling between capitals; Gulf state leaders nodding in phone calls; a ceasefire that has held for 47 days.
But when you read what the parties actually said after the announcements, you get another version.
It's not the same story.
What Was Actually Announced
On Saturday, Trump wrote on Truth Social that an agreement between the US, Iran, and 'several other countries' has been 'basically settled'. He said this deal would reopen the Strait of Hormuz and would be officially announced soon.
A few hours later, Iran's Fars News Agency, linked to the Revolutionary Guards, issued its own account. It stated that the Strait of Hormuz would remain under Iranian management. Trump's description was 'incomplete and does not correspond to reality'. The nuclear issue was not part of the preliminary agreement.
Two parties, one announcement, yet seemingly discussing two entirely different documents.
According to a US official who confirmed to Axios, what the sides are actually close to signing is a 60-day memorandum of understanding. During these 60 days: Iran clears mines from the Strait; the US lifts its naval blockade on Iranian ports; Iran receives sanctions waivers to sell oil; the two sides begin negotiations on Iran's nuclear program. The US principle is 'relief for performance'—no concessions until verifiable actions are completed.
This is not a peace agreement, but a structured pause with a highly sensitive negotiating agenda attached.
The most important, yet almost universally underreported line in the Axios story is: US troops deployed to the region in recent months will remain in place for the entire 60-day period. They will only withdraw once a final deal is reached. Trump is not de-escalating the conflict; he is negotiating with the gun still on the table.
The Four Walls That Must Hold
Between this MoU and any arrangement resembling a long-term solution lie four structural contradictions. None of them have been resolved, and all will re-emerge on day 61.
The Uranium Problem. Iran currently holds roughly 408 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60%, nearing weapons-grade; if further refined, it's enough for multiple nuclear devices. The US demands Iran suspend uranium enrichment for 20 years; Iran offered 5, which the US rejected. Tehran has explicitly refused to include surrendering the stockpile in the preliminary text. The so-called 'clear commitment' in the Axios report is, by Iran's own account, merely an oral signal passed through the Pakistani mediator, not a written obligation. An oral commitment without a verification mechanism is not a concession; it's a starting point for talks.
The Hormuz Sovereignty Trap. Trump says the Strait of Hormuz will reopen unconditionally and toll-free. Tehran says the Strait remains under Iranian management and will not return to its pre-war status. This is not a negotiating gap that clever wording can bridge; it's a real strategic conflict: Iran views control of the Strait of Hormuz as its most vital deterrent tool. As one Israeli official described with unusual precision, it is a weapon 'no less than nuclear weapons'. Since it was this very leverage that brought a superpower to the table, why would Tehran permanently surrender it for a 60-day ceasefire extension? It won't. The so-called reopening of the Strait of Hormuz is conditional, reversible, and still under Iranian management.
The Sequencing Trap. Washington sees nuclear disarmament as a prerequisite for lasting peace; Tehran sees it as an agenda item for after the formal end of the war. The MoU tries to bridge this by using the 60-day negotiating window, but this sequencing means Iran can get sanction relief, oil sales, and day-one diplomatic legitimacy first, while the second-phase nuclear talks can be extended, stalled, and accumulate ambiguity. Tehran has played this game before. The 2015 nuclear deal was abandoned by the US in 2018 precisely because the 'relief first, performance later' structure created irreversible facts on the ground. This MoU now possesses the same fragility, but in the opposite direction.
Israel's Veto Power. Netanyahu's first public response to the potential deal was not support, but a single sentence: 'Iran will never have nuclear weapons.' The White House told him Trump would be 'firm' on nuclear demands and would not sign a final deal before Iran fully complied. But Israel is not a party to this MoU; it cannot veto it. What it can do—and this is the most probable disruptive scenario in the next 72 hours—is take unilateral military action to destroy the agreement before it is signed. The MoU's clauses regarding Lebanon are particularly alarming for Jerusalem, as they explicitly include ending the war between Israel and Hezbollah. Despite the existing ceasefire, Israel has continued strikes in Lebanon. At a politically decisive moment, it is fully capable, and has some motive, to do so again.
The Architecture Behind the Architecture
The visible diplomatic process—Trump, Munir, Tehran, and the Gulf leaders on Saturday's call—is not the whole story. Beneath it, two deeper layers of calculation are operating.
China is in the Room. Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif arrived in China this weekend, meeting Chinese representatives. Pakistan's Foreign Ministry confirmed the Iran war was among the topics. China's Foreign Minister has publicly supported Pakistan playing a 'greater role' in resolving the conflict. China is not a passive observer to this mediation; it is supporting this architecture through the Pakistani proxy channel, shaping the terms of the deal without the exposure risks of direct US-China contact.
This matters because China's interests in this deal are not identical to America's. China buys roughly 90% of Iran's oil exports. These revenues fund the IRGC, Iran's ballistic missile program, and proxy networks from Hezbollah to the Houthis. China wants a deal that restores Iranian oil flows and limits US naval dominance in the Gulf. It does not want a deal that strips Iran of its nuclear deterrent and makes the US the unchallenged security architect of the Middle East. These are not the same outcomes.
Washington has a financial tool that could alter this calculus. Section 311 of the Patriot Act allows the US Treasury to sever foreign banks' access to the US dollar correspondent banking system. If deployed against Hong Kong, the systemic shock would be severe. Former US Treasury official Max Meizlish described China's banking system as 'fairly fragmented' and 'fairly susceptible to economic coercion'. The tool exists but has never been used at scale. The reason isn't lack of capability, but fear of Chinese retaliation on rare earths and manufacturing supply chains. As Meizlish put it, 'maximum pressure' has always been a 'very effective slogan'. The real leverage is in Beijing. Trump hasn't pulled it.
Leaks in the Blockade. The port of Khasab on Oman's Musandam Peninsula, 35 km from Iran at the entrance to the Strait of Hormuz, has become the main logistics channel for Iran to bypass the US naval blockade. Since the ceasefire, goods are first shipped from UAE ports on non-Iranian vessels, transshipped in Khasab, and then ferried by Iranian landing craft to Iranian ports outside controlled shipping lanes. Cargo includes cars, parts, consumer goods, and petroleum products. The cost of this route is six times pre-war logistics. Tehran is paying that cost. As long as Khasab operates, the blockade cannot create the economic suffocation Washington needs to pressure Iranian concessions in the second-phase nuclear talks.
There's a political dimension here deserving more attention: This cargo originates from UAE ports. While Abu Dhabi officially aligns with the US-Gulf framework, Dubai's trade networks are quietly keeping Iranian commerce alive. This is not a minor inconsistency; it's a structural leak in the pressure architecture. This will become critically important when second-phase nuclear talks begin and Washington tries to maximize economic leverage on Tehran.
India and the Shape of the Post-Crisis Order
While Iran dominated global attention this weekend, New Delhi was running a parallel diplomatic track with deeper long-term strategic implications.
US Secretary of State Rubio spent four days in India, meeting Modi and Jaishankar, and attending the Quad foreign ministers' meeting. The message he delivered was very clear: The US will not allow Iran to hold the global energy market hostage, and US LNG and oil can help India reduce its dependence on Gulf energy.
This proposal is not just about energy; it's a structural offer: to align more closely with Washington's security and economic architecture, reduce exposure to Iranian supply disruptions and Chinese economic leverage, and anchor India more firmly within the Indo-Pacific framework represented by the Quad.
The problem is that the relationship Rubio's trip seeks to repair is already damaged on three fronts simultaneously. Trump's tariffs have imposed some of the highest US rates on a partner country on India. Washington's elevation of Pakistan as the lead mediator for Iran, at a time when India-Pakistan relations remain highly tense since last year's air skirmish, has triggered what one analyst in New Delhi called a 'perfect anxiety storm'. Meanwhile, Trump's visit to Beijing amplified Indian fears: whether the US is seeking a great-power accommodation with China that leaves India's strategic interests unaddressed.
Modi did not directly mention Iran in Saturday's meeting. This was not an oversight but a deliberate signal. India has been buying Russian oil throughout the crisis. It has no intention of being pulled into a Western sanctions architecture that would raise its own energy costs. Simultaneously, it is acutely wary of the Pakistan-China-Iran diplomatic triangle, where India finds itself geographically encircled and strategically exposed.
The May 26 Quad meeting will be a diagnostic. If it produces a joint statement with strong wording on Hormuz, maritime security, and Iran, it signals Washington has succeeded in anchoring India within this deal's legitimacy framework. If the statement only offers vague talk of 'peaceful resolution through dialogue'—the phrasing Modi used publicly on Saturday—it signals India is hedging, not aligning.
The Energy Chain Reaction Will Not End
Whatever is announced today or tomorrow, one thing is certain: The energy crisis will not end with the signing of an MoU.
The IEA's May 2026 Oil Market Report tells the real story. Since February, global oil supply has fallen by 12.8 million barrels per day. Gulf output is 14.4 million bpd below pre-war levels. Global oil inventories fell by 129 million barrels in March and another 117 million in April. Refinery crude runs are projected to plunge by 4.5 million bpd in Q2. In April alone, North Sea spot crude experienced an unprecedented $50 per barrel trading range.
A full normalization of Middle East oil supply is not expected before 2027, and that assumes the acute disruption phase ends now. Energy industry executives warn the recovery could take longer.
Even if the Strait of Hormuz reopens cleanly tomorrow—unconditionally, verifiably, fully operational—it cannot erase the consequences of three months of inventory drawdowns, refinery disruptions, supply chain damage, and trade flow realignment. The fertilizer chain reaction is running. Food price pass-through is accelerating into Q3. Sulfur supply disruptions are affecting critical mineral supply chains. Water security in the Gulf remains a compound vulnerability. These are structural consequences, not diplomatic ones. They will not vanish with a press release.
Conclusion
The Iran war is entering a period of managed pause. But this is not a finale.
Trump needs the optics of a deal before domestic inflation becomes politically fatal—US inflation is at multi-year highs, and the link between Hormuz and fuel and food prices is something every American consumer feels directly. Tehran needs sanctions relief and economic breathing room. The structure of this MoU gives both sides what they need on day one.
But the core strategic contradictions remain intact. Washington demands a rollback of Iran's nuclear capabilities. Tehran demands retention of the Strait of Hormuz as an existential deterrent. These two demands cannot both be satisfied. One side must concede on what it has publicly declared non-negotiable. On day 61, when the 60-day window closes, we will find out which side blinks first, and whether this so-called deal is a genuine solution or an elegant way to postpone a war—because neither side is actually ready to fight it to the finish.
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