Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
20MAY

Carnegie: no inspection access, no verifiable deal

3 min read
09:47UTC

Jane Darby Menton of the Carnegie Endowment published analysis on 14 May arguing a nuclear moratorium cannot work without verification, with IAEA access curtailed for eight months and inspection architecture absent from current negotiations.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

An eight-month inspections lockout makes the 10-year gap between Iran's offer and US analyst landing zone unmeasurable.

Jane Darby Menton of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace published analysis on or around Thursday arguing that a nuclear moratorium cannot function without verification, and that IAEA access has been effectively curtailed for eight months with no negotiation on inspection architecture 1. The lockout traces to the Majlis's 221-0 vote on 11 April to suspend all cooperation with the agency, which has not been reversed. Iran's actual negotiating position remains a five-year moratorium with HEU (highly enriched uranium) transfer, the position Tehran has held since the Islamabad round broke down .

The Wall Street Journal reported a fifteen-year freeze as the analyst landing zone on the US side 2. Israel Hayom had carried that framing first on 3 May , and major wire services have not corroborated the figure as an Iranian offer. The decade-long gap between Iran's five and the US fifteen is the headline arithmetic of the negotiation. The Carnegie analysis argues that the headline arithmetic is unmeasurable while the inspection regime that would confirm any number remains absent.

A pause at three years or thirty is unverifiable in either direction without IAEA inspectors on the ground; with the IAEA locked out, neither side is currently negotiating the architecture that would convert any agreed duration into a checkable fact. Menton's argument is that both the US MOU and Iran's counter-offer are structurally undeliverable in their current form, because the body that would certify either is not present at any working session.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran and the United States are negotiating over Iran's nuclear programme. Iran has offered to stop enriching uranium for five years in exchange for sanctions being lifted. The United States reportedly wants a freeze for 15 years. To verify whether Iran keeps its side of any deal, inspectors from the IAEA (the UN's nuclear watchdog) need access to Iranian nuclear facilities. Iran's parliament voted in April to throw the inspectors out, and they have been locked out for eight months. Iran's parliament voted in April to throw the inspectors out, and they have been locked out for eight months. This means no one outside Iran can currently measure how much enriched uranium Iran has, how many centrifuges are running, or what the starting point of any deal would even be. Agreeing to freeze something that nobody can measure is, as Carnegie's Jane Darby Menton put it, structurally unworkable.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The IAEA's access to Iran was suspended by a 221-0 Majlis vote on 11 April, the most severe parliamentary constraint on IAEA access since the 1991 Iraqi case. This vote reflects Iran's calculation that an inspection black hole has symmetric strategic value: it prevents the US from confirming how much enrichment capacity survived the strikes while also preventing confirmation of how little capacity survived. Uncertainty serves Tehran's deterrence posture.

The 10-year moratorium gap between positions reflects a deeper asymmetry: Iran needs a freeze agreement to end sanctions and rebuild; the US needs a long enough freeze to be confident it is not providing sanctions relief in exchange for a temporary pause. The arithmetic cannot close without a common baseline, which only IAEA access can provide.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A moratorium agreed without IAEA verification access would give Iran sanctions relief in exchange for a commitment no one can monitor; if Iran uses the relief period to rebuild enrichment capacity covertly, the verification absence will become apparent only when capacity is deployed.

    Medium term · 0.75
  • Consequence

    The 10-year gap between Iran's five-year and the US 15-year moratorium positions is arithmetically irresolvable without a common baseline; every round of talks without IAEA access leaves both sides negotiating over an unknown quantity.

    Short term · 0.82
  • Whether Iran's actual surviving enrichment capacity after the February-March strikes is sufficient to sustain the negotiating value of its freeze offer, or whether Iran is negotiating a pause on capacity it no longer fully possesses.

    Immediate · 0.5
First Reported In

Update #98 · Three pledges, no paper, twelve sanctions

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace· 15 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Carnegie: no inspection access, no verifiable deal
The 10-year gap between Iran's five-year moratorium offer and Washington's reported 15-year landing point is unmeasurable while the IAEA remains locked out. Without verification architecture, both numbers are aspirational.
Different Perspectives
Gulf shipping and insurance markets
Gulf shipping and insurance markets
With Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb both hostile at once, war-risk underwriters face their first dual-chokepoint pricing problem; the rerouting hedge that absorbed one closure is gone for Israeli-linked hulls. Any deal that reopens Hormuz without a Houthi stand-down clause delivers only partial shipping relief.
Russia and China
Russia and China
Russia and China met IAEA chief Grossi jointly in Geneva on 5 June to coordinate an advance blocking position against Washington's censure resolution, the first documented instance of proactive pre-session obstruction rather than reactive post-vote dissent. Beijing's move came four days after OFAC designated Shanghai Qianye Energy under Iran energy sanctions.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia was left out of the emergency $4.01 billion Patriot waiver Qatar received on 2 May as its own PAC-3 stocks ran near-empty from intercepting Iranian salvoes over Aramco facilities. Riyadh is on a standard 18-month FMS queue behind a production line booked through 2030, with no equivalent priority to Qatar's Al Udeid basing role.
Houthis (Ansar Allah)
Houthis (Ansar Allah)
The Houthis declared a complete ban on Israeli Red Sea navigation on 8 June and struck Jaffa, their first attack on Israeli territory since April, seven days after the Tasnim authorisation to activate other fronts including Bab el-Mandeb. The declaration put both chokepoints under hostile authority simultaneously.
Iran
Iran
Iran agreed the 9 June mutual halt after the Mahshahr exchange and coordinated with Russia and China to block Washington's IAEA censure resolution, using the Board as a second front while the bilateral pause held on the military one. Tehran's acceptance of the Lebanon carve-out contradicts the linkage position it stated on 1 June.
Benjamin Netanyahu and the IDF
Benjamin Netanyahu and the IDF
Israel struck the Karun Petrochemical plant at Mahshahr on 8 June over Trump's explicit objection, then agreed a halt with Iran the following day scoped on Israeli terms with Lebanon carved out. Netanyahu's posture is that the IDF will not accept Iranian missile factories as off-limits regardless of US diplomatic timelines.