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Tehran-US Diplomacy on the Brink: Experts Critique Ceasefire
Tehran-US Diplomacy on the Brink: Experts Critique Ceasefire
Tehran-US Diplomacy on the Brink: Experts Critique Ceasefire
Tehran-US Diplomacy on the Brink: Experts Critique Ceasefire
Tehran-US Diplomacy on the Brink: Experts Critique Ceasefire
Tehran-US Diplomacy on the Brink: Experts Critique Ceasefire
Tehran-US Diplomacy on the Brink: Experts Critique Ceasefire
Tehran-US Diplomacy on the Brink: Experts Critique Ceasefire
By AI News Desk
🕐 13 July 2026, 11:58 AM
🌍 World
A catchy short English title (under 70 chars)
Neither Iran nor the United States seems able to deliver a “knockout blow at an acceptable price” to the other side, and both know “they have no choice other than engaging in diplomacy”, but they’re not ready to make uncomfortable concessions, argues Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project at International Crisis Group.
President Trump has become “frustrated” with diplomacy because he’s not seeing “the kind of quick results that he likes to see”, Vaez says.
The Current Diplomatic Landscape
Tehran and Washington are trying to “enforce their own interpretation” of the ceasefire agreement they signed last month. The United States believes Iran is not living up to its commitments, while Tehran accuses the US of not fulfilling its end of the bargain.
Ali Vaez’s Analysis
Vaez tells host Steve Clemons that both sides are engaged in a “zero-sum game” where neither wants to make concessions. He explains,
A catchy short English title (under 70 chars)
Neither Iran nor the United States seems able to deliver a “knockout blow at an acceptable price” to the other side, and both know “they have no choice other than engaging in diplomacy”, but they’re not ready to make uncomfortable concessions, argues Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project at International Crisis Group.
President Trump has become “frustrated” with diplomacy because he’s not seeing “the kind of quick results that he likes to see”, Vaez says.
The Current Diplomatic Landscape
Tehran and Washington are trying to “enforce their own interpretation” of the ceasefire agreement they signed last month. The United States believes Iran is not living up to its commitments, while Tehran accuses the US of not fulfilling its end of the bargain.
Ali Vaez’s Analysis
Vaez tells host Steve Clemons that both sides are engaged in a “zero-sum game” where neither wants to make concessions. He explains,
A catchy short English title (under 70 chars)
Neither Iran nor the United States seems able to deliver a “knockout blow at an acceptable price” to the other side, and both know “they have no choice other than engaging in diplomacy”, but they’re not ready to make uncomfortable concessions, argues Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project at International Crisis Group.
President Trump has become “frustrated” with diplomacy because he’s not seeing “the kind of quick results that he likes to see”, Vaez says.
The Current Diplomatic Landscape
Tehran and Washington are trying to “enforce their own interpretation” of the ceasefire agreement they signed last month. The United States believes Iran is not living up to its commitments, while Tehran accuses the US of not fulfilling its end of the bargain.
Ali Vaez’s Analysis
Vaez tells host Steve Clemons that both sides are engaged in a “zero-sum game” where neither wants to make concessions. He explains,
A catchy short English title (under 70 chars)
Neither Iran nor the United States seems able to deliver a “knockout blow at an acceptable price” to the other side, and both know “they have no choice other than engaging in diplomacy”, but they’re not ready to make uncomfortable concessions, argues Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project at International Crisis Group.
President Trump has become “frustrated” with diplomacy because he’s not seeing “the kind of quick results that he likes to see”, Vaez says.
The Current Diplomatic Landscape
Tehran and Washington are trying to “enforce their own interpretation” of the ceasefire agreement they signed last month. The United States believes Iran is not living up to its commitments, while Tehran accuses the US of not fulfilling its end of the bargain.
Ali Vaez’s Analysis
Vaez tells host Steve Clemons that both sides are engaged in a “zero-sum game” where neither wants to make concessions. He explains,
A catchy short English title (under 70 chars)
Neither Iran nor the United States seems able to deliver a “knockout blow at an acceptable price” to the other side, and both know “they have no choice other than engaging in diplomacy”, but they’re not ready to make uncomfortable concessions, argues Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project at International Crisis Group.
President Trump has become “frustrated” with diplomacy because he’s not seeing “the kind of quick results that he likes to see”, Vaez says.
The Current Diplomatic Landscape
Tehran and Washington are trying to “enforce their own interpretation” of the ceasefire agreement they signed last month. The United States believes Iran is not living up to its commitments, while Tehran accuses the US of not fulfilling its end of the bargain.
Ali Vaez’s Analysis
Vaez tells host Steve Clemons that both sides are engaged in a “zero-sum game” where neither wants to make concessions. He explains,
A catchy short English title (under 70 chars)
Neither Iran nor the United States seems able to deliver a “knockout blow at an acceptable price” to the other side, and both know “they have no choice other than engaging in diplomacy”, but they’re not ready to make uncomfortable concessions, argues Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project at International Crisis Group.
President Trump has become “frustrated” with diplomacy because he’s not seeing “the kind of quick results that he likes to see”, Vaez says.
The Current Diplomatic Landscape
Tehran and Washington are trying to “enforce their own interpretation” of the ceasefire agreement they signed last month. The United States believes Iran is not living up to its commitments, while Tehran accuses the US of not fulfilling its end of the bargain.
Ali Vaez’s Analysis
Vaez tells host Steve Clemons that both sides are engaged in a “zero-sum game” where neither wants to make concessions. He explains,
A catchy short English title (under 70 chars)
Neither Iran nor the United States seems able to deliver a “knockout blow at an acceptable price” to the other side, and both know “they have no choice other than engaging in diplomacy”, but they’re not ready to make uncomfortable concessions, argues Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project at International Crisis Group.
President Trump has become “frustrated” with diplomacy because he’s not seeing “the kind of quick results that he likes to see”, Vaez says.
The Current Diplomatic Landscape
Tehran and Washington are trying to “enforce their own interpretation” of the ceasefire agreement they signed last month. The United States believes Iran is not living up to its commitments, while Tehran accuses the US of not fulfilling its end of the bargain.
Ali Vaez’s Analysis
Vaez tells host Steve Clemons that both sides are engaged in a “zero-sum game” where neither wants to make concessions. He explains,
A catchy short English title (under 70 chars)
Neither Iran nor the United States seems able to deliver a “knockout blow at an acceptable price” to the other side, and both know “they have no choice other than engaging in diplomacy”, but they’re not ready to make uncomfortable concessions, argues Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project at International Crisis Group.
President Trump has become “frustrated” with diplomacy because he’s not seeing “the kind of quick results that he likes to see”, Vaez says.
The Current Diplomatic Landscape
Tehran and Washington are trying to “enforce their own interpretation” of the ceasefire agreement they signed last month. The United States believes Iran is not living up to its commitments, while Tehran accuses the US of not fulfilling its end of the bargain.
Ali Vaez’s Analysis
Vaez tells host Steve Clemons that both sides are engaged in a “zero-sum game” where neither wants to make concessions. He explains,
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