Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
26MAY

Iran misses MOU deadline; verifier locked out

4 min read
08:44UTC

Tehran let a two-day US reply window lapse on 9 May. The MOU asks Iran to surrender 440.9 kg of 60%-enriched uranium that no inspector has been allowed to count for eight months.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran missed the reply window on a deal that asks for an uncountable handover.

Iran's Foreign Ministry let the 9 May two-day reply window lapse on the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) the United States transmitted through Pakistan earlier this week . The text demands Tehran surrender 440.9 kg of 60%-enriched uranium, freeze all enrichment for twelve to fifteen years, and reopen the Strait of Hormuz within thirty days, in return for sanctions relief and the release of frozen assets. The body that would normally certify any of this, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has had no on-site access to any Iranian nuclear site for eight months, since the Majlis voted 221-0 on 11 April to suspend cooperation. Tehran is being asked to surrender 440.9 kg of material whose location no independent inspector has been allowed to confirm since September 2025.

Arms Control Association (ACA) analysis published in April reports that Steve Witkoff, the US Special Envoy who led the only substantive US-Iran nuclear session on 26 February, raised no monitoring or verification mechanisms at the table 1. The same analysis records Witkoff describing Natanz and Fordow, Iran's two principal enrichment plants, as "industrial reactors", and expressing surprise that Iran manufactures its own centrifuges. The deal Witkoff drafted asks for an inventory nobody can count, monitored by an agency nobody invited, in a text the US side never wrote to be checkable.

Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf posted on his public account that "Operation Trust Me Bro failed" 2. Parliamentary spokesperson Ebrahim Rezaei called the US demands "unreasonable, unrealistic and maximalist". Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said Tehran was "still reviewing". Donald Trump told ABC News the same day that Iran had "agreed to it but the next day they forget", and described the document as "more than one page", contradicting the "one-page memo" framing Axios ran on 6 May. Two parties are publicly contradicting each other in real time about a paper neither has signed.

The 2015 JCPOA spent eighteen months operationalising its monitoring architecture after signature, and that was with continuous IAEA presence at Natanz throughout the negotiation. Comparable settlements (Libya 2003, the 1994 Agreed Framework with North Korea) all began with verifier access established, then negotiated quantities. The 2026 MOU inverts that order. The peace document Trump transmitted on 5 May and the EPIC FURY conclusion Rubio declared on 5 May sit on top of an empty inspection framework, and a counter-party whose parliament has now publicly mocked the text.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran and the United States have been negotiating through Pakistan to try to end the war. The US sent Iran a document called a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), essentially a draft agreement, asking Iran to hand over a large stockpile of enriched uranium (the material that can be turned into a nuclear weapon) and to stop enriching more of it for the next 12-15 years. The agency that would normally check whether Iran actually has that uranium is the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), a United Nations body whose inspectors verify nuclear stockpiles worldwide. Iran kicked the IAEA out eight months ago. So the US is asking Iran to surrender 440.9 kg of material that nobody outside Iran has been allowed to count or verify since September 2025. Iran let the two-day response deadline pass without replying. Iran's parliament speaker mocked the document publicly, calling it 'Operation Trust Me Bro failed'. The US negotiator who drafted the deal reportedly called Iran's main nuclear plants 'industrial reactors', a basic factual error that undermined confidence in the technical grounding of the proposal.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The verification void has two structural origins that the MOU text does not address.

First, the **Witkoff channel** operates on personal-diplomacy logic, not arms-control institutional logic. Steve Witkoff's authority derives from his relationship with Donald Trump, not from any inter-agency process involving the State Department's Bureau of Arms Control or the IAEA Secretariat.

Arms-control negotiations that have produced verifiable outcomes (JCPOA, START, the Chemical Weapons Convention) all ran through interagency processes that embedded technical verification requirements into early draft texts. Witkoff's February session produced no verification mechanism because there was no State Bureau Arms Reduction team in the room.

Second, the **Majlis vote of 221-0 on 11 April** to suspend IAEA cooperation was a constitutional act under Iran's domestic law, not a rogue IRGC unilateral move. Reversing it requires another Majlis vote, which in turn requires sufficient political cover from Khamenei's office.

The MOU's deadline mechanism (a two-day reply window via Pakistan) is a document from a real-estate negotiator's toolkit applied to a body that operates on revolutionary-legitimacy timelines, not contract-completion calendars.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Without verifier access re-established before any text is signed, any deal is structurally unenforceable; a signed MOU without IAEA baseline access would replicate the 2002 Agreed Framework collapse on a faster timeline.

    Short term · 0.85
  • Consequence

    The 14 May Trump-Xi summit now carries the verification architecture question: if Beijing can broker IAEA re-access as a confidence measure before any signing, it changes China's leverage position in the talks.

    Immediate · 0.72
  • Precedent

    A US negotiating team drafting nuclear surrender demands without engaging the IAEA's safeguards division sets a template that undermines the NPT verification framework globally, regardless of whether this specific deal collapses.

    Long term · 0.78
First Reported In

Update #92 · An MOU asking Iran to surrender what nobody can count

The War Zone· 9 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Iran misses MOU deadline; verifier locked out
A nuclear settlement drafted without verifier access has no successful precedent; both sides are now contradicting each other on whether a deal exists.
Different Perspectives
Markets
Markets
Brent crude rose 2.2 per cent to $96.34 on 10 June, reversing a 7 per cent weekly decline built on deal optimism, as the overnight exchange repriced the Strait of Hormuz risk premium in a single session. The move reflects transit-risk repricing rather than supply shock: Iran's exports had already collapsed to below 300,000 barrels per day.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Pakistan's Naqvi channel, the only mediation track carrying both civilian and military buy-in, was stress-tested by live ordnance within 48 hours of the 6-7 June Tehran visit. Whether Washington informed Islamabad of the imminent strike plan while Naqvi was in Tehran remains undisclosed, putting the channel's neutrality under scrutiny.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait hosted the third Iranian strike on its soil since the 3 June airport drone attack, with Ali Al Salem airbase targeted in the three-country salvo. Its recent $1.98 billion Anduril Anvil counter-drone purchase signals it is rearming rather than reconsidering its hosting posture.
Bahrain
Bahrain
Bahrain absorbed the IRGC barrage via PAC-3 intercepts with its magazine already at 87 per cent depletion and no resupply before 2027. Sounding air-raid sirens over Manama, it faced the intercept burden with the thinnest defensive stack in the Gulf coalition.
Jordan
Jordan
Jordan reported all five incoming missiles intercepted with no injuries and no damage, a clean defensive performance that strengthens Amman's case for staying in the Western coalition without escalating its own posture. It now sits on Iran's target list for the first time despite not being a party to the Abraham Accords confrontation.
Iran / IRGC
Iran / IRGC
Foreign Minister Araghchi posted on X that US forces should 'leave our region if you want to be safe' and framed the exchange as a US defeat, while the IRGC claimed 21 targets hit and an F-35 hangar destroyed. The claims serve a domestic and Arab-audience framing rather than a verified battle-damage assessment.