US Iran Talks

On one hand, we hear about peace, negotiations, and agreements… and on the other, we see troops, attacks, and escalation.

THE U.S. PROPOSAL

So let’s start with the proposal the U.S. made to Iran. A 15-point proposal, presented as a “peace plan” a complete framework to end the conflict.

Now, if we go through every single detail, we’ll get lost. So let’s look at it the way an investor should.

What are they really asking for?

The U.S. is asking for three very specific things.

The first has to do with nuclear capabilities.

They’re asking Iran to completely dismantle its nuclear program. Not limit it, not control it. End it.

No uranium enrichment capability, surrender of all stockpiles, full dismantling of facilities like Fordow and Natanz, and of course, full transparency with international inspections.

In simple terms… “you will never acquire nuclear weapons.”

The second part concerns military power.

The U.S. wants Iran’s ballistic missile program restricted, both in number and range. It should be used strictly for defense, and all funding and support for groups operating across the Middle East must stop completely.

In practice, this means asking Iran to give up a large part of its geopolitical influence.

And the third part is the incentive.

If Iran agrees to all of this, the U.S. promises sanctions relief, reintegration into the global economy, and even support for civilian nuclear energy.

At the same time, the Strait of Hormuz would remain open and neutral something critical for the global oil market.

So overall, the U.S. proposal is essentially saying something very simple:
“Fully weaken yourself… and we’ll let you back in.”


IRAN’S RESPONSE

And this is where Iran’s response comes in.

It was clear. They rejected the proposal.

Not only that… they brought their own proposal to the table. First of all, Iran demands an immediate halt to attacks. Before any discussion even begins, they want the war to stop.

Then they ask for guarantees that this situation won’t repeat itself. That there won’t be another agreement that gets broken a few months later.

They demand compensation for the damage caused.

They want the broader regional conflict to end not just between the U.S. and Iran.

And finally… the most important point of all: they want control over the Strait of Hormuz.

And this is where the real problem becomes obvious. Because the U.S. wants a weakened Iran, while Iran is asking to strengthen its position.

So we’re not talking about small differences. We’re talking about two completely opposite strategies.

And that means that right now… an agreement is nowhere in sight.


THE TRUST PROBLEM

And as if that wasn’t enough, there’s another major issue.

Trust.

Because Iran does not trust Trump at all.

In previous negotiations, while talks were ongoing and there were signs of progress toward a deal… military strikes suddenly took place. In one case, there was even a scheduled meeting, and just days before it, attacks began.

So for Iran, the message is clear:
“We can’t trust you.”

And that’s why we’re seeing this stance:
“You’ve already misled us twice… we won’t fall for it a third time.”

And this is how we end up in one of the most unusual situations in recent years.

On one side, the U.S. says negotiations are ongoing. On the other, Iran says there are no negotiations at all. And at the same time… troops are being deployed to the Middle East, forces are being reinforced, and tensions keep rising.


THE MARKETS

Because while all this is happening… stocks are going up.

And oil is going down.

And this is the most interesting part.

Markets don’t react to what’s happening right now, but to what they believe will happen.

And right now, it seems they believe there will be a resolution.

But in reality, the two sides are far apart. There’s no trust, and military presence is increasing.

So what we’re seeing is a market that’s rising… not because the problem is solved.

But because it hopes it will be.

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I am wondering..
Russia is engaged with Ukraine.
US is engaged with Iran.

I am wondering what happen if China take this opportunity to invade Taiwan ?

This can become a much bigger global crisis if these issues are not resolved are earliest.

The war has already implications like a world war in my opinion. And yes, I also believe that if China were to invade Taiwan, this is a great time because the attention of the US is on Iran with a large number of Trump supporters.

I think the US is more desperate than Iran to reach an agreement. I don't believe Trump's statements. We'll see how things develop.

Es un buen analisis. Y lo peor es que al final no va a ganar nadie, salvo las compañias de armas. Estados Unidos se va embarcar en otra guerra en el medio oriente. Irán va a quedar devastado, va haber otra migración masiva del medio oriente hacia europa. Y el nuevo gobierno que haya va ser inestable, si es que no acaba dividido en señores de la guerra. Es por este tipo de politicas asquerosas e intransigentes. Que hice una serie de libros sobre la democracia mierderil, un tipo democracia tóxica donde el peor tipo de ser humano gobierna a millones de vidas y las destroza con sus malas decisiones. También hice un experimiento con AI para ver si podían argumentar sobre la aplicación de pena de muerte para politicos que cometen negligencia genocida y genocidios. Lo coloque en mi post, pero casi nadie lo ha visto, se llama "Cuando las IA debaten sobre la pena de muerte: un experimento sobre sesgos, posicionamiento y cognición artificial" por si te interesa leerlo. No creo que ningún curador vaya a verlo después de todo.

I don't think so Iran will negotiate with us about the nuclear program point, because if us already have then why Iran ends nuclear program, let see what happen.