Can Trump launch Iran nuclear deal 2.0 in second White House term?-OxBig News Network

An Iranian missile system is displayed next to a banner with a picture of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the late Lebanon’s Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, in a street in Tehran, Iran, October 2, 2024. 

Majid Asgaripour | Via Reuters

Iran’s fortunes may look entirely different over the course of President Donald Trump’s second term — whether for Tehran’s good or very ill.

In surprising moves, Trump has now several times expressed his desire to make a deal with Iran — most recently by way of a letter to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei last week, asking that the two leaders should “negotiate” over the Middle Eastern country’s nuclear program. This comes in contrast to seven years prior, back in 2018, when Trump who pulled the U.S. out of the original 2015 nuclear deal, triggering a nosedive in American-Iranian relations.

“I would like a deal done with Iran on non-nuclear. I would prefer that to bombing the hell out of it,” Trump said in an interview with the New York Post in early February.

Yet Trump has simultaneously re-launched his “maximum pressure” sanctions campaign on the oil-exporting country since retaking office. Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei, meanwhile, has flat-out refused to give up Tehran’s nuclear program and rebuffed Trump’s outreach. On Saturday, the Iranian leader condemned attempts by unnamed “bullying governments” to make a deal and vowing that his government will not negotiate under pressure.

Iran is under pressure – from its own spiraling economy, the dramatic loss of regional allies like Bashar al-Assad in Syria, and from the weakening of proxy forces like Hezbollah in Lebanon, following Israeli. 

But while its strength in those areas has greatly lessened than during Trump’s first term, its leverage in another aspect — the sheer volume of nuclear material it has produced — is now much greater.

‘Significant concerns’ over weapons development

A picture taken on November 10, 2019, shows workers on a construction site in Iran’s Bushehr nuclear power plant during an official ceremony to kick-start works for a second reactor at the facility. Bushehr is currently running on imported fuel from Russia that is closely monitored by the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency.

ATTA KENARE | AFP via Getty Images

“Iran keeps enriching [uranium] as part of its leverage-building exercise,” Sanam Vakil, director of the Middle East and North Africa Programme at Chatham House, told CNBC. “The more it has, the more it can offload, and that can appear to be a compromise for any such deal that will come down the line.”

Tehran insists that its program is for civilian energy purposes only. But Iran’s nuclear enrichment has reached 60% purity, according to the IAEA — dramatically higher than the enrichment limit posited in the 2015 nuclear deal, and a short technical step from the weapons-grade purity level of 90%.

“A country enriching at 60% is a very serious thing. Only countries making bombs are reaching this level,” IAEA chief Rafael Grossi said in 2021. 

Under the 2015 nuclear deal, formally called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), Iran committed to capping levels of 3.67% enriched uranium at 300 kilograms. 

Iran now has nearly 22 times that material, Energy Intelligence reports, citing the IAEA. And Trump has not ruled out U.S. or Israeli military strikes on Iran to prevent it from building a bomb.

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