There is, once again, a cautious glimmer of diplomacy between Tehran and Washington. Iran’s deputy foreign minister, Majid Takht-Ravanchi, has signaled that Tehran is prepared to show flexibility in reviving a nuclear agreement — provided the United States lifts the web of sanctions that has tightened around the country for years. His message is neither flamboyant nor defiant. It is, rather, transactional: sanctions relief in exchange for nuclear restraint. Iran’s willingness to freeze enriched uranium, he argues, should be read not as capitulation but as proof that dialogue remains possible. The export of uranium stockpiles, he cautions, is a matter for later stages. Any deal, he insists, must be confined strictly to the nuclear file.
In Washington, too, the tone has softened, at least rhetorically. The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, has said that President Donald Trump would prefer a negotiated settlement and would even consider meeting Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, if that were required to secure an agreement. Dialogue, Rubio suggests, is not endorsement but instrument. Yet even as these words were spoken, Washington dispatched a second aircraft carrier to the Middle East — a reminder that American diplomacy rarely travels without the shadow of force. The message remains blunt: Iran will not be permitted to acquire nuclear weapons.
Switzerland has confirmed that a new round of negotiations will take place in Geneva, with Oman once again playing the quiet intermediary. The symbolism is unmistakable. Geneva has long been shorthand for painstaking diplomacy, and Oman’s role as a discreet broker has previously kept channels open when public rhetoric hardened. The machinery of negotiation is not broken. The question is whether it will be allowed to function in good faith. The 2015 nuclear accord — the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action — was painstakingly negotiated under President Barack Obama. It imposed strict limits on Iran’s nuclear program and subjected it to intrusive inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency in return for sanctions relief.
Whatever its imperfections, it represented a rare moment when adversaries chose verification over confrontation. That framework unraveled when Trump, in his first term, withdrew the United States unilaterally. The rupture did more than fracture US-Iran relations; it sent a signal that multilateral agreements could be reversed at the stroke of a pen. Trust, once eroded, is not easily restored. For Iran, the lesson was stark. Compliance did not guarantee continuity. Sanctions, swiftly reimposed and expanded, constricted the economy, fueled inflation and deepened hardship for ordinary citizens. Yet they did not collapse the state nor compel surrender. Economic strangulation has a moral cost as well as a strategic limit.
The western argument has long been framed in absolute terms: Iran must never acquire a nuclear weapon. Tehran, for its part, maintains that it has no such ambition and points to past cooperation with international inspectors as evidence. However, beneath this exchange lies a deeper, often unspoken reality. Iran exists in a region shaped by asymmetry and hostility. It faces a nuclear-armed adversary in Israel — a genocidal state that has never signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and whose undeclared arsenal is widely acknowledged. Israel’s leaders have repeatedly described Iran’s capabilities as an existential threat and have reserved the right to act unilaterally.
Yet Israel itself stands accused, in international forums and by human rights organizations, of grave violations in Gaza as it carried out genocide against innocent Palestinian women and children. The case brought before the International Court of Justice alleging genocidal acts has intensified scrutiny of its military campaign. Whether or not the court ultimately upholds that charge, the scale of destruction and civilian suffering has unsettled global opinion. In this context, Iran’s insistence on maintaining a minimum deterrent capability — short of weaponisation but sufficient to dissuade attack — is framed in Tehran not as aggression but as insurance.
The United States, meanwhile, continues to provide Israel with diplomatic cover and substantial military support. Washington argues that this backing is rooted in alliance commitments and regional stability. Critics see instead a pattern of unconditional endorsement that shields Israel from accountability and allows it bullying the neighboring countries. This perceived double standard — uncompromising pressure on Iran, indulgence towards Israel — corrodes the moral authority of western non-proliferation arguments. None of this is to suggest that nuclear proliferation would make the Middle East safer. The spread of atomic weapons would compound instability and risk catastrophic miscalculation.
However, neither can regional security be constructed on permanent imbalance. Deterrence, however uncomfortable, has long been a grim pillar of international order. States, surrounding Israel, seek it not because they cherish destruction but because they fear vulnerability against the bullying creep supported by the United States. Iran’s position, viewed through this lens, is not inexplicable. Surrounded by US bases, sanctioned by western powers and threatened by a regional rival with nuclear capabilities, it argues for the sovereign right to peaceful nuclear technology and for a defensive posture that prevents coercion. The demand that it accept permanent strategic inferiority while its adversaries expand their arsenals is politically untenable within Tehran and difficult to justify abroad.
Diplomacy, if it is to succeed, must reckon with these realities rather than deny them. A revived agreement will require sequencing: sanctions relief matched by verifiable nuclear limits. It will require guarantees robust enough to survive electoral cycles in Washington. Moreover, it will require an honest acknowledgment that security in the Middle East cannot be selective. If non-proliferation is the goal, it must be universal. The alternative is familiar. More sanctions, more deployments, more threats — a choreography of escalation that edges the region closer to conflict. Aircraft carriers may deter in the short term, but they cannot substitute for political settlement. Nor can moral arguments persuade if they are applied unevenly.
The renewed talks in Geneva offer a narrow opening. Whether it widens depends on whether Washington is prepared to match rhetoric with reciprocity, and whether Tehran is willing to codify its assurances under rigorous oversight. For Iran, the pursuit of a minimum deterrent in the face of what it sees as existential hostility is framed as a right. For the United States, preventing weaponisation is a red line. Bridging that divide demands more than suspicion and force. It demands the difficult craft of recognizing that durable security rests not on dominance, but on balance.

