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The emerging U.S.-Iran deal is a genuine win built on verification, not trust — Iran must destroy its enriched uranium, dismantle its nuclear program and stop funding terrorist groups before seeing a dime of sanctions relief. The framework is structured around physical milestones, meaning Tehran earns every benefit rather than receiving upfront concessions. This is exactly the kind of tough, results-driven diplomacy that actually works.
Any deal with Iran is far shakier than advertised — hardliners in Tehran are openly attacking the draft, Iran's judiciary chief says confrontation with the U.S. will never end, and the nuclear stockpile has been mined and sealed off, making verified removal nearly impossible. Iranian state media and lawmakers are circulating a completely different version of the terms than Washington is selling. A deal built on this much internal chaos and deception is not a foundation for lasting peace.
The emerging agreement reflects Iranian strength, not Western leverage. After failing to force capitulation through war, sanctions, and military pressure, Washington is negotiating on terms Tehran helped shape. Iran preserved its sovereignty, maintained key strategic leverage, and demonstrated it could withstand pressure from far stronger adversaries. If a deal is finalized, it will be seen as recognition that coercion failed and that Iran emerged from the conflict in a stronger regional position than its opponents anticipated.