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.
