At the core lies Iran’s insistence on uranium enrichment
under the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. Legally, the
framework does not prohibit civilian enrichment; politically, however,
Washington treats it as non-negotiable. This divergence is not technical—it is
strategic. If rights
recognized under international agreements are selectively interpreted, the
dispute ceases to be about compliance and becomes one of power.
Sanctions illustrate this imbalance more starkly. Years of
economic restrictions have neither dismantled Iran’s nuclear capability nor
altered its regional posture. What they have done is compress an entire
economy, with ordinary citizens bearing the cost. If sanctions are retained as leverage while concessions
are demanded upfront, the negotiation risks resembling coercion dressed as
diplomacy.
The military backdrop further erodes credibility. Iran links
any meaningful dialogue to a ceasefire in Lebanon, where conflict involving Hezbollah
continues to inflict heavy casualties. The attempt by Washington to treat this
as a separate theatre appears strategically convenient but analytically weak. Negotiations conducted in
parallel with active conflict rarely produce durable outcomes.
Then comes the Strait of Hormuz—arguably the most
consequential fault line. Iran’s proposal to assert control and impose transit
tolls challenges long-standing norms of open navigation. For the US, unrestricted access
is essential not just for energy flows but for sustaining its global strategic
posture. This is not a peripheral dispute; it is a contest over who defines the
rules of the region.
Missile capabilities and military presence complete the
deadlock. Tehran views its arsenal as a deterrent necessity; Washington sees it
as a destabilizing threat. Iran demands withdrawal of US forces; the US insists
on maintaining them until compliance is secured. These positions are not negotiating gaps—they are
opposing doctrines.
The uncomfortable conclusion is - unless both the United
States and Israel move beyond maximalist frameworks, they risk reinforcing the
perception that the objective is not behavioral change, but sustained strategic
containment of Iran. If that perception hardens, demands for compensation, sovereignty, and security
guarantees will only intensify.






