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CIA warned Trump before he signed

3 min read
17:09UTC

CIA Director Ratcliffe briefed Trump with a pessimistic read on Iran's nuclear concessions before the signing; Trump signed anyway and the memorandum defers every nuclear question 60 days.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Ratcliffe warned Trump before he signed that Iran would not concede on enrichment.

Before Trump signed the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding, his own intelligence chief told him it would not deliver. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Director John Ratcliffe briefed the President with a "pessimistic outlook" on Iran's willingness to make nuclear concessions, drawn from signals intelligence on senior Iranian officials 1. Trump signed the war-ending instrument anyway, knowing his own agency assessed it was not a nuclear settlement.

The memorandum defers every nuclear specific, enrichment levels, the unaccounted stockpile, ballistic missiles, to a 60-day negotiating window . Under its terms Iran is to readmit International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors, the UN body that verifies what states hold, though Vance set no date for their return . The agency has now gone 97 days without access and cannot confirm what Iran retains. So the memorandum Trump signed ends the shooting and postpones the nuclear question the shooting was fought over.

Signing a ceasefire against your own intelligence assessment is a defensible choice if the goal is to stop the killing rather than to denuclearise. Trump's counter-argument, made in the Oval Office, is that a ceasefire that stops the dying is worth signing on its own terms. The cost is that The Administration cannot later claim surprise when the nuclear half fails: Ratcliffe told him in writing, before the signature, that Iran would not concede on enrichment, and the 60-day talks now open from that warning.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Before Trump signed the deal, his CIA director, John Ratcliffe, told him privately that Iran probably would not give up its nuclear programme in the 60-day talks the deal sets up. Trump signed anyway. This is not unusual in diplomacy: leaders often proceed with agreements their intelligence services consider unlikely to fully succeed, because a partial deal or a ceasefire has its own value even without a nuclear guarantee. The problem is that the international nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, has not been allowed inside Iran's nuclear sites for 97 days. That means nobody outside Iran knows what it currently holds. The 60-day talks start from a position of verified ignorance about the very weapons question they are supposed to resolve.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Trump signed knowing his CIA director assessed Iran would not concede on enrichment. Two structural conditions explain why he signed regardless. First, the Islamabad MOU ends active hostilities, which has a separate near-term political value independent of nuclear outcomes: the blockade disrupts allies such as India and drives oil prices that damage the US economy.

Second, the 60-day deferral reflects the absence of any enforcement mechanism on enrichment that Ratcliffe's pessimistic assessment could have offered instead. Operation Roaring Lion has already run; a second wave of strikes against Iran's dispersed and hardened enrichment sites would face international opposition from post-Islamabad allies.

Iran has adapted to OFAC sanctions over 20 years of maximum-pressure cycles. Ratcliffe presented the assessment, not an alternative; there was none available at the level of pressure already applied.

Escalation

Ratcliffe's briefing framed the 60-day nuclear window as likely to fail on enrichment. If the IAEA does not return within 30 days of Friday's ceremony, the international community will have no early-warning visibility into whether Iran uses the ceasefire to accelerate enrichment rather than freeze it. That gap is the primary nuclear risk of the current arrangement.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    97 days without IAEA access means the 60-day nuclear talks open with no verified enrichment baseline; any ceiling agreed in July cannot be certified against a known starting point.

  • Risk

    If Ratcliffe's pre-signing assessment proves correct and Iran declines enrichment concessions in 60-day talks, Trump faces a choice between accepting a non-nuclear outcome or restarting military pressure.

First Reported In

Update #130 · Trump signed the war over; it kept going

ABC News· 17 Jun 2026
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