The newly signed US–Iran Memorandum of Understanding is best understood as an interim political framework, not yet a durable nuclear settlement. Its strongest immediate effect is to reduce the risk of a near-term return to large-scale US–Iran fighting by halting hostilities, opening a 60-day negotiating window, beginning the rollback of the US naval blockade, and setting out reciprocal steps on shipping, sanctions waivers, and implementation machinery. Its weakest area is the nuclear file: the public text restates that Iran will not develop nuclear weapons and says the two sides will negotiate the fate of stockpiled enriched material under an as-yet undefined mechanism, with IAEA-supervised on-site down-blending named only as a minimum method. It does not yet set an enrichment ceiling, a stockpile cap, a fully specified inspection regime, or a clear dispute-resolution and snapback structure.
That matters because the central lesson of previous Iran diplomacy is straightforward: language about intent is not a substitute for verification. The June 2026 Quad statement at the IAEA Board of Governors explicitly argued that no diplomatic solution will be sustainable if Iran’s safeguards non-compliance is not addressed, while recent agency reporting says the IAEA has lacked the access needed to verify the status, whereabouts, and composition of key Iranian nuclear material and facilities. A ceasefire can lower immediate war risk without yet solving the problem that caused repeated crises in the first place.
In practical terms, the MoU probably lowers short-term nuclear risk, but only in the narrow sense that it lowers the chance of imminent strikes and counter-strikes around Iran’s programme. It does not yet materially lower medium- or long-term proliferation risk unless the follow-on agreement restores something much closer to the logic of the JCPOA: measurable caps, intrusive and continuous monitoring, defined access procedures, and automatic consequences for non-compliance. Without those, this MoU could freeze the crisis rather than resolve it.
It is also important to separate two different dangers. Based on public evidence, the more immediate danger is not an actual US–Iran nuclear exchange. The United States’ declaratory policy says nuclear weapons would be considered only in extreme circumstances to defend vital interests, and assessments still stop short of saying Iran currently fields a nuclear weapon. The more plausible danger is a renewed conventional war over a near-threshold Iranian nuclear capability that remains only partly monitored and politically contested.
What the MoU actually says
The agreement’s key de-escalatory provisions are substantial. It declares an immediate and permanent end to military operations on all fronts, commits both sides to respect sovereignty and non-interference, opens a 60-day period to negotiate a final deal, and begins a rollback of the US naval blockade within 30 days. Iran, for its part, undertakes to use its best efforts to restore safe commercial passage through the Strait of Hormuz, initially without charge for 60 days, while addressing technical and military obstacles and engaging Oman and other Gulf littoral states on future maritime arrangements.
On the nuclear issue, however, the document is notably thinner than its political headlines suggest. Iran “reaffirms” that it will not procure or develop nuclear weapons. The two sides agree to resolve the disposition of stockpiled enriched material through a mechanism to be mutually agreed, with on-site down-blending under IAEA supervision identified as the minimum methodology. They also agree that, pending the final deal, Iran will maintain the current status quo of its nuclear programme while the United States will impose no new sanctions and deploy no additional forces in the region. What the text does not do is set out the actual enrichment rules, the inventory baseline, the access schedule, the monitoring architecture, or the enforcement sequence. All of that is deferred.
The sanctions and incentives architecture is similarly mixed. Paragraph 7 speaks of terminating sanctions on an agreed schedule as part of the final deal, yet paragraph 10 provides for immediate Treasury waivers on Iranian oil exports and associated services, and paragraph 11 provides for procedures to make frozen Iranian funds usable. US officials have also described the arrangement as “performance-based”, saying Iran’s access to benefits depends on compliance with the MoU’s commitments, including on nuclear material and freedom of navigation. In other words, the MoU offers Iran early economic gains, but not yet the full and final sanctions settlement that some readers may assume from a quick reading.
Two absences matter analytically. First, the MoU contains no explicit withdrawal or termination clause in the public text. Second, unlike the JCPOA system endorsed by UNSCR 2231, it contains no spelled-out complaint process or snapback mechanism. The final deal is supposed to be endorsed by a binding Security Council resolution, but the current MoU does not yet explain what happens if either party stalls, cheats, or simply lets the 60-day period lapse without agreement. That silence is one of the document’s biggest weaknesses.
Strategic background
On the US side, the relevant background is not a bespoke “Iran nuclear doctrine” so much as the broader American approach to deterrence. The Pentagon’s 2022 Nuclear Posture Review says the fundamental role of US nuclear weapons is to deter nuclear attack on the United States and its allies and partners, and that nuclear use would be considered only in extreme circumstances to defend vital interests. In parallel, the present administration’s public position on Iran has been blunt: Iran must never acquire a nuclear weapon, and the United States has been willing to combine coercion, sanctions, and force with diplomacy to pursue that aim.
On the Iranian side, the picture is more complicated than either side’s public slogans. Iranian leaders have long said that nuclear weapons are forbidden and that Iran seeks only peaceful nuclear technology; the Iranian leadership has repeatedly framed enrichment as a sovereign right rather than proof of weapon intent. At the same time, available assessments remain clear that Iran previously had an organised nuclear weapons programme up to 2003, that its more recent enrichment advances brought it close to weapons-usable thresholds, and that some senior Iranian voices have openly discussed changing doctrine if Tehran were to face an existential threat. The resulting posture is best described as latent deterrence: maintaining enough capability, knowledge, and ambiguity to strengthen bargaining power without openly crossing the line into a declared bomb.
The history of the JCPOA is essential here. It paired sanctions relief with precise nuclear limits and unusually intrusive monitoring: enrichment capped at 3.67 per cent, a stockpile cap of 300 kg of low-enriched uranium, provisional application of the Additional Protocol, daily access at Natanz, continuous monitoring of key equipment, and a rules-based access process for suspicious undeclared sites. Those features mattered far more than rhetoric, though there were complaints that Iran was not allowing full access and was violating the agreement. When the US withdrew in 2018 and Iran further reduced transparency and monitoring, the nuclear issue became harder, not easier, to measure and manage.
The regional setting also remains unstable. Israel is not a party to the MoU, and events in Lebanon are already testing whether the ceasefire language can be translated into actual restraint on the ground. The maritime piece is also politically sensitive: the MoU points to future dialogue with Oman and other littoral states, but transit through Hormuz remains governed by international maritime law, and both the EU and wider international actors have continued to stress free navigation and transit rights. Any article for a general audience should therefore avoid implying that the MoU has cleanly settled the Lebanon theatre, proxy activity, or the long-term legal governance of Hormuz.
Implications for future nuclear conflict
Short term effects
In the short term, the MoU probably reduces the likelihood of renewed military action against Iran’s nuclear infrastructure. That is the agreement’s clearest success. A ceasefire, a negotiating clock, no new US sanctions, no additional US force deployments, early oil waivers, and a visible role for the IAEA in handling known stockpiled material all lower immediate incentives for a fresh exchange of blows. Oil prices and tanker traffic reacted accordingly, which is a useful, if imperfect, sign that markets took the de-escalation seriously.
But the same short-term calm leaves the underlying nuclear dispute only partly constrained. The IAEA has recently said it cannot verify whether Iran has suspended all enrichment-related activities at affected facilities or account properly for the size and whereabouts of key enriched uranium stocks. The June 2026 Quad statement to the IAEA Board similarly stressed that safeguards implementation “cannot be suspended” and that a sustainable deal must rest on restored verification and monitoring. So the near-term risk of war goes down, but the near-term risk about the nuclear file remains uncomfortably high.
Medium term effects
The medium term is where the MoU’s ambiguity becomes most dangerous. If the 60-day process produces detailed rules on enrichment, stockpile disposition, access, monitoring, sequencing of sanctions relief, and consequences for violation, the MoU could become the staging ground for a real arms-control settlement. If it does not, it could instead become a holding pattern in which both sides claim success while preserving mutually incompatible expectations. CFR’s analysis is right to emphasise that “the details matter”, especially on inspections, verification, and dismantlement.
This is also where deterrence cuts in two directions. One possible reading in Tehran is that surviving war, restoring some economic access, and pushing the hardest choices into later talks proves that brinkmanship works. Carnegie’s recent analysis warned that Tehran may conclude it has established enough deterrence to rebuild quietly underground once pressure eases. Another possibility is that the damage done to Iran’s infrastructure, together with the threat of renewed US action and the lure of reintegration, pushes Tehran towards a more serious compromise. Both readings are plausible; the MoU does not yet tell us which one will dominate.
Long-term effects
In the long term, the MoU will reduce the prospect of future nuclear conflict only if it evolves into something functionally comparable to the JCPOA in verification terms, even if the final text is politically different. That means specific enrichment and stockpile rules, restored IAEA continuity of knowledge, prompt access procedures, durable safeguards commitments, and a sanctions-relief schedule linked to verified performance rather than political atmosphere alone. The E4 leaders have already framed this correctly: they are prepared to lift sanctions in response to “clear, verifiable steps” by Iran on its nuclear programme.
If those conditions are not met, the long-term outlook is much less encouraging. A vague final deal would leave Iran’s latent capability, regional mistrust, and US willingness to re-use force all intact. Under that scenario, the real danger is not necessarily an actual nuclear exchange, which still appears unlikely on current public evidence, but a recurring cycle of coercion, clandestine rebuilding, alarm, and preventive strikes centred on Iran’s nuclear threshold status. That would be a failure of conflict termination, not a durable peace.
Analysis
The DEFCON Warning System sees this MoU temporarily reducing the tension in the area, but significantly increases the chance of nuclear war for the following reasons:
- Iran is able to research and develop nuclear weapons as there is no inspection provision in the agreement. They know the U.S. is willing to use force…at least until the U.S. is affected themselves by war. This shows the United States is unwilling to accept domestic consequences. They also now know that a stronger deterrent against foreign intervention is needed.
- Russia has seen that the United States is unwilling to fully prosecute a war. It has seen the U.S. betray allies like Israel and protestors in Iran. Russia now believes the United States will not assist Ukraine, and it may even believe that the U.S. will not honour NATO commitments as fully as it may have in the past. Short of directly attacking a NATO country, Russia believes it has free reign in the European theatre.
- China also sees U.S. reluctance to prosecute a war. Not only is this is a poor sign for Taiwan, but regional allies in the Asian theatre are now more vulnerable to China expansion and aggression.
- Although North Korea already knew this, nuclear deterrence is effective. And now it sees the United States afraid to use military power when consequences hit home.
The U.S./Iran war was a disaster for the United States and the West. Not because the U.S. lost militarily. On the contrary, on that front, there was no contest between the United States and Iran. The U.S. was winning handily. Where the U.S. lost was when it lost the political will to see it to the end. And the world saw that. More importantly, Iran saw that. And Russia. And China. And North Korea.
Hostile actors are now emboldened. They know the United States will not be there for allies. They know the United States does not have the political will to defend its allies as long as the U.S. isn’t affected directly.
The world has just become more dangerous because the United States started something it was unwilling to finish.
