Trump's room to manoeuvre narrows as US, Iran close in on framework deal
United States President Donald Trump finds himself in a bind as he seeks to end the war against Iran: he is under pressure to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and get US gasoline prices down, but at the same time faces a potential backlash from Iran hawks in his own party over any concessions to Tehran. Trumpโs dilemma became clear during a week of hectic diplomacy marked by word of an emerging framework deal that, according to sources familiar with the matter, would extend a current ceasefire and release Iranโs stranglehold on the vital oil-shipping route while deferring discussions of its nuclear programme. Such an interim agreement, if approved by Trump and Iranโs rulers, would amount to the most significant step toward peace since he joined with Israel in attacking Iran on February 28, and could ease the soaring energy prices the conflict has triggered. But it could also draw the disapproval of a key segment of Trumpโs base โ influential Republicans clamouring for him to โfinish the jobโ by resuming strikes to close Tehranโs path to a nuclear weapon, his main stated reason for going to war. Earlier this week, some of Trumpโs hardline anti-Iran allies responded to reports of a possible deal with criticism, even arguing that he might gain little beyond the 2015 Iran nuclear deal negotiated by former president Barack Obama and scrapped by Trump during his first term. Senior Republicans rarely at odds with Trump, including Senators Lindsey Graham, Roger Wicker and Ted Cruz, urged the president not to compromise. Trump pushed back, insisting he was in โno rushโ โand would only accept a โgreatโ agreement. Caught between the competing demands โ a quick solution to high gas prices and an end to Iranโs nuclear ambitions โ the president has little room to manoeuvre. โTrumpโs rhetorical swings and abrupt reversals of the โpast week suggest a president trying to park a wide war in a tight spot,โ said Laura Blumenfeld, a Middle East expert at Johns Hopkins University. A White House official said that โnegotiations are proceeding nicely and he has made his redlines clearโ. โPresident Trump will only make a good deal for the American people, which must ensure that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon,โ the official said on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive internal matters. Unanswered questions Leaks to the media on Thursday about the terms of the โmemorandum of understanding (MoU)โ suggest โthe proposed deal leaves many of the thorniest questions unanswered. Those include what the straitโs long-term status will be, what will happen to Iranโs stockpile of near-weapons-grade enriched uranium and the details of potential sanctions relief. The emerging framework, โwhile averting military escalation, would at this stage fall far short of Trumpโs earlier demand for โunconditional surrenderโ and his vow to dismantle Iranโs nuclear programme. Iran has insisted it is only for peaceful purposes. โIf these terms are accurate and if a deal โis concluded, โ the Islamic Republic appears to be getting more in the MOU than the US,โ Jason Brodsky, policy director of United Against Nuclear Iran, a nonprofit policy organisation, said on X. โA pledge for more nuclear talks? Be wary.โ Iranโs Tasnim news agency said the text of the agreement had not been finalised. Trump has several times before said a deal was close, and there was no guarantee that the latest effort would succeed where others have not. This weekโs diplomatic flurry has played out against the backdrop of a fresh but limited exchange of strikes that has strained the fragile truce between the US and Iran. Analysts say Trump appears to be trying to find a balance between getting Iran to give โground on key issues while in return offering only โlimited compromises that will still allow him to โ frame the outcome as a win. Getting the strait reopened would be welcomed internationally, but Trump would just be regaining the free flow of shipping that existed before he started the war. Meanwhile, the political and economic clocks are ticking for the president, whose public approval ratings have hit new lows. Midterm elections are looming in November, with his fellow Republicans struggling โto maintain control of Congress, and new assessments suggest that if the conflict continues, there will be deep damage to the global economy. Trump dismisses midterms Iran appears to be seeking some easing of sanctions up-front to boost its crippled economy, which Trump critics fear he may be unable to resist in pursuit of a war-ending deal. But at a cabinet meeting on Wednesday, Trump seemed to respond to his critics by reiterating maximalist positions and insisting he didnโt care about the midterms. His aides have privately expressed concern that high gasoline prices could damage Republicansโ electoral prospects. Iran has shown it is confident it has the upper hand, having proved it can survive the military onslaught and throttle one fifth of the worldโs oil supplies, analysts say. โThe president gives every sign of wanting this over soon,โ said Jon Alterman of the Centre for Strategic and International Studies think tank. That makes the Iranians dig in their heels. The past weekโs whiplash was nothing new for a president who campaigned promising to stay out of unnecessary wars, only to take the US into a foreign entanglement without clearly articulating the rationale. How he decides to end the conflict is expected to be a major factor in defining his second-term foreign policy legacy, analysts say.