The post-war MoU with Iran is being sold as a compromise. In practice, it is a narrow deal shaped by the need to end a war that could not be sustained.

The Cradle

The comparison that has traveled furthest places the sanctions relief alongside the 2015 nuclear accord, as if Tehran has been readmitted to the global economy in a single step.
That reading does not hold. Washington made concessions to end the war and restore traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. The arrangement reflects those priorities. What Iran receives is narrower than the public debate suggests, and much of it remains uncertain in both scope and duration. The terms set out in the MoU fall into three distinct categories.
What Iran actually receives
The first covers the benefits Iran will gain in practice. These amount to access to roughly $12 billion of its own funds held abroad, along with a waiver allowing it to sell oil and oil products during a 60-day negotiating window.
Iran was already selling that oil, much of it to China, so the waiver does not open a closed market. What it does is narrow the sanctions discount Iran has been forced to accept on each barrel, which has already shrunk to $1 a barrel, and make it easier to bring the proceeds home. The gain is real, but it is counted in margins rather than in any return to the world economy.
There is also a political dimension to this access. The ability to bring funds home without the same level of friction matters for domestic stability, particularly after a period of sustained pressure on the economy. Yet even here, the effect should not be overstated. These are Iran’s own funds, released under conditions that can shift quickly, and the broader sanctions architecture remains intact.
The second category includes concessions that are temporary and reversible. The clearest is the withdrawal of US forces from Iran’s periphery. That move carries weight, but its durability is uncertain. The record of the US President Donald Trump administration weakens confidence in any commitments it makes, and the drawdown was partly inevitable.
The US cannot sustain that level of deployment in the region indefinitely. Some retrenchment would have come regardless of any agreement.
Even the release of frozen assets can be reversed in practice. Former US president Joe Biden's administration unfroze around $6 billion in Iranian funds, only to refreeze them under domestic and Israeli pressure. Episodes like this have eroded American credibility over time. A concession that can be undone with a signature is discounted before it is even tested, and that discount shapes how Tehran reads the present framework.
Reversibility now sits at the center of the talks. The familiar point that Iran and the US do not trust one another has been repeated for years, but the character of that mistrust has shifted. During the 2013 to 2015 negotiations, Iranian officials questioned whether Washington would uphold its commitments over time.
What has changed is the character of the mistrust. Iranian officials in that period doubted American fidelity over the long run, whereas they now begin from the assumption that Trump will actively look for ways to abrogate its commitments before the ink is dry on any agreement.
Diplomatic credibility matters in ways Trump never appreciated. A concession that can be undone with a signature is discounted heavily before it is even weighed, and that discount falls hardest on the parts of this framework that matter most.
The third category concerns what has not been committed at all. The removal of sanctions and the creation of a $300 billion investment fund are not present obligations. They are conditional statements tied to the conclusion of a broader nuclear deal within the 60-day window.
In fact, the $300 investment fund idea, originally proposed by the GCC countries during last year’s negotiations in Oman, is still a highly abstract concept.
Despite the White House claiming money has been committed, the structure and parameters of the fund are unclear and are likely still in the initial planning phase. Whether a fund like this will attract $300 billion, a figure of unknown providence, or whether it will ever exist at all is highly speculative.
After the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), despite US assurances and a far better geopolitical climate, global investors were hesitant to even lend Iran money outside of a one-year repayment timeline. They feared that the deal breaking down would prevent Iran from repaying them. It does little for the politics of the agreement that its most eye-catching line items are the ones being held back.
The nuclear file returns
Less attention has been paid to what Iran may offer in return. Beyond the downblending of its stockpile of highly enriched uranium, the picture remains unclear. That uncertainty is itself part of the story, reflecting both the pace of the negotiations and the political constraints on all sides.
In the round of talks that preceded both the recent war and the earlier 12-day conflict, Iran signaled a willingness to suspend enrichment for a number of years. It also indicated a return to enrichment capped at 3.67 percent under close inspection by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), along with a zero stockpiling provision. The details are technical, but such a framework would significantly reduce proliferation risks and extend the time required for any potential breakout.
There is no guarantee that the same terms are on the table now. Majlis Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf stated that “We will not return to pre-war conditions.” Although his remarks focused on the Strait of Hormuz, they have been read more broadly as a signal that Tehran expects a different balance in any renewed agreement.
Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has also indicated that “as of now, no decisions have been made” and that Iran's approach to concessions needs to be established by the Supreme National Security Council and achieve the approval of the supreme leader.
Even so, a deal that includes elements of earlier proposals, such as a multi-year suspension of possibly 10 years or more, and limits on stockpiling, would represent a significant outcome for Washington. It would allow the Trump administration to argue that it secured deeper concessions than those achieved under former US president Barack Obama, even if the path to that outcome has been shaped by a far more volatile set of circumstances.
That claim would not erase the consequences of earlier policy. When the US withdrew from the nuclear deal, it released Iran from constraints on research and development. Iran has since advanced its enrichment capabilities, including the development and deployment of more efficient centrifuges. The objective that once guided American policy, keeping Iran at least a year away from sufficient material for a nuclear weapon, is no longer achievable in the same form.
Comparisons with the Obama-era agreement, therefore, require care. The 2015 deal suspended secondary sanctions on a broad and open-ended basis. It enabled Iran to re-engage with global markets and regain access to assets abroad, estimated at over $100 billion. Trade expanded, financial channels reopened, and Iranian businesses gained room to operate within a more predictable environment.
The current framework does not offer anything comparable. Its economic impact is far smaller and more tightly defined, and it does not alter the underlying structure of sanctions in a lasting way.
A more useful comparison lies with the Joint Plan of Action, the interim agreement that preceded the 2015 deal. The present terms are more generous than the earlier arrangement, for a clear reason. Washington needed to secure the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and stabilize energy flows. That requirement shaped the concessions on offer, and it explains why the terms appear uneven when measured against broader strategic ambitions.
A deal shaped by limits
There is no certainty that the 60-day window will produce a lasting agreement. The same reversibility that weakens American commitments also limits Iran’s incentives to make binding concessions, and both sides are operating within tight political constraints.
The MoU follows a military campaign that killed senior Iranian figures and thousands of civilians. It emerges from a context in which Washington does not hold decisive leverage, despite its military reach. Any expectation of symmetry in the outcome rests on an assumption that does not match the balance of forces or the costs already incurred.
The agreement should be read in that light. It reflects an attempt to contain the consequences of a war that did not produce a decisive outcome. The decision to pursue the conflict set the parameters within which diplomacy now operates, narrowing the space for more ambitious objectives.
For policymakers in Washington, the question is not how many concessions have been exchanged, but what the arrangement achieves in practice. Goals such as overthrowing the Iranian government, forcing capitulation, or removing Iran from regional influence were never realistic. The present moment offers a narrower opportunity, shaped by the limits exposed during the conflict.
The US has a real opportunity to address the Iranian nuclear issue permanently and reform its relationship with Iran at a time when president after president has made clear that US national security imperatives lie elsewhere in the world.
Trying to lock up as many Iranian assets in Qatari bank accounts or obstruct Iranian petrochemical sales for as long as possible should not be the measure of diplomatic success.
That requires a degree of consistency that has been lacking in recent years, as well as a willingness to accept outcomes that fall short of maximalist goals.
The MoU does not resolve these questions. It creates space in which they might be addressed, while also exposing the limits of what can be achieved in the current moment. Whether that space is used will depend on decisions that have yet to be made, and on whether both sides are prepared to move beyond the patterns that have defined their relationship for decades.




