Iran-US Talks: A New Chapter in a Decades-Long Confrontation

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The nuclear talks between Iran and the United States unfolding in Geneva are not taking place in a vacuum. They are the latest chapter in a confrontation that has lasted more than four decades — one marked by hostage crises, covert operations, proxy wars, economic warfare, and repeated cycles of diplomatic engagement and collapse.
The second round of indirect talks, mediated by Oman and lasting three and a half hours, produced agreement on “general guiding principles” according to Iran’s foreign minister. He called the session “more constructive” than the first and indicated that written proposals would be exchanged before a third meeting in approximately two weeks. The trajectory, for now, is cautiously forward.
But the history demands humility. Iran and the US reached a landmark nuclear agreement in 2015 — one that was verifiable, multilateral, and widely praised as a major diplomatic achievement. It was unilaterally abandoned by the United States three years later. The damage to trust that followed has not been repaired, and it shapes every conversation in Geneva.
The current talks are taking place against a backdrop of US military buildup in the Gulf, Iranian naval exercises in the Strait of Hormuz, domestic crackdowns on Iranian protesters, and contradictory signals from a US president who simultaneously says he wants a deal and suggests he might prefer a different Iranian government. These are not ideal conditions for a fragile diplomatic process.
Yet the talks continue. Both sides, for all their hostility and mistrust, appear to have concluded that the risks of continued confrontation — escalating military tensions, further nuclear advances, economic pain for ordinary Iranians — outweigh the risks of engagement. Whether that shared calculation can sustain a process long enough to produce an agreement is the defining question of this moment — and perhaps of the decade.

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