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Analysis

U.S.-Iran Negotiations: Dead End

The August 15 edition of the Iran Media Review considers Iranian commentary suggesting an impasse in U.S.-Iran talks.

Ali Alfoneh

11 min read

Nuclear negotiations between Iran and the United States appear to have reached an impasse: Tehran is not inclined to give in to Washington’s demands, and President Donald J. Trump appears to have lost interest in Iran. Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian openly admitted that Iran continues to negotiate due to bureaucratic inertia and a lack of alternatives and inadvertently revealed the Cabinet’s decision not to rebuild Iran’s nuclear installations, fearing renewed U.S. attacks. Just as inadvertently, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps revealed that it shares the Cabinet’s analysis but considers it impolitic of the president to disclose such matters. Reformist and hard-line analysts and political actors also appear to believe the negotiations have reached a dead end. 

  • August 11: Reformist Ham-Mihan released excerpts of President Masoud Pezeshkian’s comments about U.S.-Iran negotiations, delivered during a meeting with Iranian media representatives: 
    • Hard-line Kayhan Editor Hossein Shariatmadari asserted that the United States wants to impose its will on Iran, and there is no reason for Iran to continue negotiating. Pezeshkian responded: “What should we do if not negotiate?” Pezeshkian continued that if Iran tries to rebuild its nuclear installations, Iran will be attacked by the United States. 
  • August 13: Ham-Mihan reported on reactions to Pezeshkian’s statements on Iran-U.S. negotiations: 
    • Fouad Izadi, a commentator close to Saeed Jalili, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s representative to the Supreme National Security Council, wrote on X: “The next U.S. attack against Iran will not entail any cost to the United States. This is how U.S. authorities will interpret his excellency the president’s statements. This increases the risk of another military action against Iran.”  
    • Shariatmadari wrote: “The meaning of the president’s statements is: We must either surrender to U.S. demands in the course of negotiations or submit to the U.S. in war.”  
    • Aziz Ghazanfari, an IRGC political deputy, wrote in Basirat News: “There is no doubt about the sincerity and honesty of the honorable president, but foreign policy is not a field in which you can say everything openly.” 
  • August 13: A Donya-ye Eqtesad article quoted a statement Deputy Foreign Minister Majid Takht-Ravanchi made to Kyodo News:  
    • “A resumption of negotiations with the United States depends on them guaranteeing they will not attack us while we negotiate and accepting a win-win formula … Zero-percent uranium enrichment is nonnegotiable, but we can discuss enrichment capacity and level … Iran’s missile capability is not negotiable … Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has not made U.S. compensation for the damage inflicted on Iran a precondition for negotiations, although Iran is legally entitled to compensation … It is not clear when the next round of negotiations will begin.”  
  • August 13: Saeed Jalili, quoted in hard-line Kayhan, said: 
    • “Negotiating with the United States or refraining from negotiations are both diplomatic instruments. At times, each of these instruments is useful, and at other times, not … If negotiations do not serve the purpose of taking advantage of opportunities that arise, you will suffer losses. But there are those who consider this matter a universal medicine and the solution to all problems. For them, this instrument has become a sanctity beyond and above criticism.” 
  • August 13: Amir Ali Abolfath, an American studies expert, commented on Takht-Ravanchi’s statements in an interview with reformist Etemad 
    • “Iran will not easily change its negotiation position unless something huge happens, something resembling Japan and Germany’s unconditional surrender in World War II … We have not reached that point yet, and I find it unlikely that an agreement is within reach.” 

The views represented herein are the author's or speaker's own and do not necessarily reflect the views of AGSI, its staff, or its board of directors.

Ali Alfoneh

Senior Fellow, AGSI

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