How many times were the US and Iran on the verge of a deal?
One hundred days into the US-Israel war on Iran, we look at the number of times a deal seemed close. While a peace agreement remains
One hundred days into the US-Israel war on Iran, we look at the number of times a deal seemed close. While a peace agreement remains elusive on the 100th day since the US and Israel first launched strikes on Tehran on February 28, the US and Iran have appeared to come close to a deal on several occasions. The war began with Operation Epic Fury, the joint campaign waged by the United States and Israel against Iran at the end of February. Iran retaliated by attacking both Israel and US military assets in the Gulf. Armed hostilities largely subsided after the temporary Pakistan-mediated ceasefire began on April 8. Direct talks in Islamabad fell apart on April 12 and the two sides have exchanged a series of proposals for peace via Pakistan since then. However, several flare ups since have escalated fears that full‑scale fighting could resume. Here is what happened each time the US and Iran were close to a deal, and why the prospect of peace fell through. Direct talks in Islamabad What happened: On April 11 and 12, representatives from the US and Iran met in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, for the first direct talks between the two sides since the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran. The US delegation was led by Vice President JD Vance and included Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and the president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner. Iranian negotiators included Foreign Minister, Abbas Araghchi, Parliament Speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, and Ali Bagheri Kani, a senior member of Iran’s Supreme Security Council and chief nuclear negotiator. Ahead of those talks, Ghalibaf publicly stated that for Iran, a ceasefire by Israel in Lebanon and the unfreezing of Iranian assets abroad were non-negotiables for Tehran. Israel has carried out near-daily strikes on Lebanon since March 2, and now occupies about one-fifth of the country, since Iran-backed Hezbollah launched strikes on northern Israel in retaliation for the initial attacks on Tehran. “This is a make-or-break moment for lasting peace,” Pakistani Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif said the night before the Islamabad talks. What went wrong: There had been talk of extending the negotiations into a third day. Iranian officials were reportedly ready to stay, suggesting they wanted to keep talking. The US delegation, however, decided to wrap up. “We have been at it now for 21 hours,” Vance said after the talks. “The good news is that we’ve had substantive discussions. The bad news is that we have not reached an agreement.” Vance said that while Washington was flexible, Tehran had refused to accept its “final and best offer”.
“We need to see an affirmative commitment that they will not seek a nuclear weapon… not just now, but for the long term,” Vance said. “We haven’t seen that yet.” Iran’s ambassador in Islamabad deemed the talks “not an event, but a process” which “laid the foundation” for future engagement. However, the US and Iran have not held any direct talks since then. Iran’s nuclear capabilities have emerged as a major bone of contention between the US and Iran. Iran is believed to be holding an estimated 440kg (970lb) of uranium enriched to 60 percent, short of the 90 percent required for weapons-grade material, but at the point at which it becomes much quicker to reach 90 percent. Tehran has said for years that its nuclear programme is for civilian purposes only and it does not intend to build nuclear weapons. But Israel, the US and other Western countries allege that Iran has been preparing to have the capacity to build nuclear weapons. They argue the 60 percent enrichment level achieved so far is well above what is needed for a civilian nuclear energy programme – between three and five percent enrichment. The US wants this stock of 60 percent enriched uranium to be handed over, but Iran rejects that. Naysan Rafati, a senior Iran analyst at the International Crisis Group think tank told Al Jazeera that in each instance that the US and Iran have been close to an agreement “there’s been a combination of progress on certain issues, and deadlock on others. So close isn’t good enough – even if there’s 95 percent agreement, the remaining five percent tends to be the hardest.” Rafati said that when it comes to Iran’s nuclear programme, there are differences on both the substance and sequencing of an agreement. “Tehran wants to defer the details for subsequent talks, while Washington seeks more clarity from the outset. So it’s a combination of the familiar – Iran’s enriched uranium stockpiles and the future trajectory of its nuclear activity – and the more recent.” What happened after: Within four days of the ceasefire and the collapse of direct talks, Washington announced a naval blockade of shipping in and out of Iranian ports in a bid to curtail Tehran’s ability to raise revenues from oil sales – a major escalation that undercut any sense of momentum. Lebanon ‘ceasefire’ What happened: On April 16, Trump announced that Israel and Lebanon had reached a 10-day ceasefire to allow negotiations for a more permanent security and peace agreement to continue.
