Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Iran Conflict 2026
2MAR

Rubio slips Iran deal timeline to months

2 min read
08:00UTC

Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on 7-8 June that Iran's enrichment matters could take months to resolve, walking back the administration's earlier weekend timeline.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Rubio stretched the Iran deal from this weekend to months, with nothing signed and a strike in between.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on 7-8 June that Iran's enrichment matters "could take months" to resolve 1. That walks back the administration's earlier line that a deal "could happen over the weekend", and no Iran instrument was signed across 7-8 June.

The slip belongs in the Trump words-versus-action ledger. No US-Iran deal was put on paper across 5-6 June while the president talked up an imminent settlement; Rubio's months estimate now stretches that gap from days into a quarter. Rezaei's financial precondition remains the substantive sticking point, and the IDF strike inside Iran adds a kinetic complication a negotiating track measured in months can ill absorb.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the top US diplomat, said on 7-8 June that sorting out Iran's uranium enrichment issues would take months. This contradicted President Trump, who had said days earlier that a deal could happen 'over the weekend'. Nothing was signed. The gap matters because two parties need to agree: Iran has demanded $24 billion in frozen assets be released before any deal (a condition the US has publicly refused), and the UN nuclear agency has not had inspectors inside Iran for 97 days, meaning no one outside Iran can verify what state the uranium stockpile is in. A deal without that verification is something no US president could credibly sell domestically. Rubio's months estimate is a more honest timetable than Trump's weekend framing.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Trump's withdrawal from the 2015 JCPOA (nuclear deal) in 2018 destroyed the trust architecture that made that agreement possible. Iran's position since 2018 has been that any new deal requires upfront sanctions relief before compliance steps, having seen a previous deal abandoned by the same government after Iran met its obligations.

This structural trust deficit makes Rubio's 'Hormuz first, sanctions later' sequence (stated at Senate Foreign Relations on 2 June) non-starter logic from Tehran's perspective. The months estimate reflects the time needed to bridge a gap that the 2018 withdrawal created.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The rial hit 1,762,000 per dollar on Day 100 (ID:3974), erasing all deal-optimism gains from the prior fortnight; Rubio's months estimate, once reported in Tehran markets, is likely to push it further, removing any economic incentive for the Iranian government to concede quickly.

  • Risk

    Each week without a signed instrument increases the probability that the US midterm elections in November 2026 move Iran policy into electoral politics, making any administration concession on sanctions relief domestically harder to defend.

First Reported In

Update #121 · Trump said don't strike; Israel struck Iran

Newsweek· 8 Jun 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
Different Perspectives
Oil markets / Lloyd's of London
Oil markets / Lloyd's of London
Brent fell to near $87.33 on 80 per cent deal-probability pricing, but Lloyd's has not de-listed Hormuz from its war-risk register and shipping diversions continue at 139 vessels. Insurance markets are lagging futures: physical risk remains while financial markets have spent the good news before the paper exists.
India
India
Modi is expected to raise the deaths of three Indian sailors in the 11 June CENTCOM strike on the MT Settebello with Trump at G7 sidelines, the first non-party leader to put the blockade's human cost into a formal bilateral. New Delhi is also a major Iranian oil buyer whose import volumes the sanctions-relief terms will govern.
Israel (Netanyahu)
Israel (Netanyahu)
Netanyahu stated Israel is not party to the deal on 12 June; Defence Minister Katz ruled out the Lebanon withdrawal Iran's draft demands, inserting a third blocker the US-Iran negotiating channel cannot resolve. Israel's position tethers Hormuz reopening to a Lebanon settlement Washington has not brokered.
Pakistan (mediator, Sharif/Naqvi)
Pakistan (mediator, Sharif/Naqvi)
Sharif declared a final agreed text on 12 June before either principal confirmed it, running two Tehran visits in under a week without securing a written IRGC or Khamenei response. Islamabad's incentive to claim a diplomatic win outpaces its standing to deliver either capital's signature.
Iran foreign ministry (Araghchi)
Iran foreign ministry (Araghchi)
Araghchi declared digital signing within days while setting dilute-in-Iran as a non-negotiable red line on the 440.9 kg HEU stockpile, a standing Tehran position he cannot override without authorisation from Khamenei, reachable only by courier. The FM track is sprinting to close before the IRGC reasserts control.
Trump administration / CENTCOM
Trump administration / CENTCOM
Vance called the deal still TBD on 12 June while CENTCOM downed Iranian drones over Hormuz for a second consecutive night and the White House register stayed blank. Washington holds the ship-out position on HEU and has not signed an Iran instrument in over 100 days of conflict.