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Iran Conflict 2026
26MAY

Iran defers nuclear talks to phase two

3 min read
08:44UTC

Baghaei confirmed the nuclear file has been split off into a separate 60-day second phase that starts only once a war-ending memorandum is signed. The hardest question is being deferred, not solved.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran has deferred the nuclear file to a 60-day second phase that starts only after a signed ceasefire.

Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei confirmed on 24-25 May that nuclear questions have been moved into a separate 60-day second phase, one that begins only after any war-ending memorandum is signed 1. Tehran insists the nuclear track cannot open until the first phase, covering the Strait of Hormuz and frozen assets, is resolved.

This is a development in a known dispute, not a fresh one. Accounts of the deal's nuclear terms had been contradictory across the parties , and Baghaei's confirmation resolves part of that confusion by naming the structure: the nuclear file is sequenced behind the ceasefire, not bundled into it. What is newly on the record is the architecture, a time-boxed second stage, rather than the existence of a nuclear disagreement.

The phasing makes diplomatic sense and reflects a constraint inside Tehran. Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has directed that Iran's enriched uranium stay in the country , which is incompatible with the verification regime Washington would seek. Deferring that fight to a separate 60-day window lets a war-ending agreement close without first cracking the question that has defied negotiators for a decade.

Deferral shrinks the negotiation, not the problem. US positions on enrichment caps and verification have not been made public, and the 60-day clock would start only after the harder sequencing fight over the strait and the frozen assets is already settled. A second phase that opens with no agreed verifier, no IAEA re-access date, and no destination for Iran's enriched stock could stall exactly where the 2015 deal's successors did.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran confirmed on 24-25 May that discussions about its nuclear programme have been pushed into a separate, later stage of any peace agreement. The plan has two parts. Part one is ending the war: reopening the Strait of Hormuz, lifting the US naval blockade, and releasing frozen Iranian money. Part two, starting only after part one is signed, would be 60 days of nuclear talks. But Iran's supreme leader has already said Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium must stay in the country, which is the main thing the US wants removed. The nuclear inspection agency, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), was expelled from Iran in April, so there is no one in place to verify whether Iran makes any nuclear changes. The 60-day window exists on paper, but the tools needed to make it work are not yet in place.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The 60-day nuclear deferral is structurally forced by the IAEA access gap created by the Majlis vote of 11 April 2026. Iran cannot credibly offer nuclear concessions for Phase 1 because there is no inspection regime through which any concession could be verified. The deferral to Phase 2 is not primarily a diplomatic choice; it is a verification impossibility that both sides are papering over by agreeing to solve it later.

Khamenei's 21 May uranium-stay directive compounds the problem: even if Phase 2 begins, the Supreme Leader has publicly instructed that the enriched uranium stockpile must remain in Iran, removing the one confidence-building measure the Axios MOU draft described as a Phase 2 deliverable.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If Phase 1 is signed and the blockade lifts, Iran retains full enrichment capacity for at least 60 days with no IAEA inspection access, creating a window during which any covert enrichment acceleration would be undetectable.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Khamenei's 21 May uranium-stay directive, combined with the 60-day deferral, means the IAEA will need to be restored to full access before Phase 2 can begin, a political precondition neither the Axios MOU draft nor Baghaei's statement has addressed.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    A signed war-ending MOU that explicitly defers nuclear questions would mark the first time the US has agreed in writing that a non-nuclear war with Iran can be terminated without simultaneous nuclear concessions, a structural precedent for any future Iranian nuclear negotiation.

    Long term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #107 · Two markets, two prices on one Iran deal

Al Jazeera· 25 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Global shipping and insurance markets
Global shipping and insurance markets
Lloyd's Joint Hull Committee held Hormuz war-risk at $10-14 million per voyage on 26 May, requiring a signed government instrument or UNSC resolution before acting. Futures traders repriced Brent 1.63% on the Bandar Abbas strike; insurers did not move because no qualifying document has been produced in 87 days.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Pakistan's army-chief channel relayed the draft MOU to Tehran and backs Iran's framing that the ball is in Washington's court. Islamabad's general-officer corps now holds structural authority over the deal's critical text, having extracted the only substantive nuclear-monitoring concession of the war; legitimising this channel is itself a strategic choice Washington has not publicly affirmed.
China
China
Chinese DPI hardware arrived in Iran for a tiered censorship system, while China's NFRA ordered state banks to halt new lending to five sanctioned refiners after GL V expired. Beijing is simultaneously exporting surveillance infrastructure to Tehran and adjusting sanctions exposure to US pressure.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Riyadh signed the IMO letter rejecting Iran's Hormuz toll system and requested Trump stand down the 19 May strike alongside the Qatari Emir and UAE President. Saudi Aramco has already warned that Hormuz normalcy is delayed to 2027; at $87 per barrel as Riyadh's budget breakeven, every month of war-risk insurance premium erodes the fiscal cushion the crown prince requires.
Qatar
Qatar
Doha hosted Iranian negotiators, holds $12 billion in frozen Iranian assets Tehran has named as a Hormuz precondition, and signed the five-Gulf-state IMO letter rejecting Iran's PGSA transit route on the same week. Qatar cannot release the assets without a Washington order and cannot credibly claim neutrality after the IMO signature; it is covering both outcomes rather than bridging them.
Israel
Israel
Prime Minister Netanyahu called Trump on 24 May to object that the Lebanon war-end clause inside the draft MOU would force Israel to wind down its campaign against Hezbollah. His objection gives Jerusalem an effective veto over text Washington and Tehran had otherwise largely settled, without Israel being a party to the deal.