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#USIranClashOverCeasefireTalks
#USIranClashOverCeasefireTalks
US Iran The Ceasefire Impasse A Full Picture
Background How We Got Here
The current conflict is now entering its 27th day rooted in a longer sequence of failed diplomacy. The US and Iran held negotiations in early 2025 but when Trumps self imposed deadline expired without a deal Israel launched a surprise strike on Iran which the US ultimately joined. That 12 day war in June 2025 targeted Irans nuclear facilities and military infrastructure. The current conflict is a continuation and escalation of those unresolved tensions and it is the second time the Trump administration has launched attacks on Iran during the course of what were described as active diplomatic talks a detail Tehran has not forgotten.
The US Ceasefire Proposal A 15 Point Plan
Washington submitted a 15 point ceasefire proposal to Iran through Pakistani intermediaries Pakistan offered to host renewed talks underscoring its unusual diplomatic role as a channel between the two adversaries. According to officials briefed on the plan the proposal covers
Sanctions relief in exchange for de escalation.
A rollback of Irans nuclear program and removal of enriched uranium.
Limits on Irans ballistic missile capabilities.
Reopening the Strait of Hormuz through which roughly one fifth of global oil supply passes currently under a near total Iranian blockade.
Restricting Irans support for armed proxy groups across the region.
Notably Israeli officials who have been pushing Trump to continue and intensify the war were reportedly caught off guard by the US decision to submit a ceasefire plan at all. Trump told reporters the US is talking to the right people and that Iran wants to make a deal so badly. He also extended a previously threatened strike deadline on Irans energy infrastructure framing it as goodwill to allow backchannel talks to proceed.
Irans Response Flat Rejection Counter Demands
Tehrans reaction was swift and dismissive. Iranian officials labeled the US plan illogical one sided and a non starter. Irans ambassador to Pakistan stated bluntly that no direct or indirect negotiations have taken place between the two countries so far directly contradicting Trumps public claims. The Iranian military went further saying Washington was in no position to negotiate and was essentially talking to itself.
Irans own counterproposal is far more maximalist in scope including
Closure of US military bases in the region.
War reparations from the United States.
Iranian control over the Strait of Hormuz a demand that if met would give Tehran a permanent economic chokehold over global energy markets.
No ceasefire until Iran achieves what it describes as its strategic objectives.
As a backdrop to all this Iran continued military operations even as talks were nominally underway launching what reports describe as Waves 79 through 81 of strikes on Israel and Gulf Arab countries including an attack that ignited a fire at Kuwait International Airport. Israel for its part continued striking Iran including targeting a submarine development center in Isfahan.
The Ground Reality Military Escalation Continues in Parallel
Even as diplomatic signals flew back and forth both sides escalated militarily
The US deployed the 82nd Airborne Division and over 3000 additional troops to the region alongside a Marine contingent already en route.
Israel launched new waves of airstrikes on Tehran including what it described as completed strike waves against the Iranian capital.
Irans attacks have caused cascading economic damage particularly through the Strait of Hormuz blockade oil prices are surging with options markets now pricing in a meaningful probability of 150 per barrel oil.
Global equity markets reacted sharply US and Canadian stock indices dropped significantly on March 26 after Iran formally rejected the US proposal.
The Credibility Problem A Cloud of Mutual Mistrust
At the heart of the impasse is a deep structurally embedded trust deficit on both sides
Iran points to the fact that the US launched strikes twice during active diplomatic processes including the strikes that started the current war as proof that Washington negotiates in bad faith.
The US meanwhile is skeptical of Irans commitment to any deal given that Iranian commanders have publicly vowed to continue fighting until complete victory.
Some analysts and X commentators interpret the entire exchange as leverage theater both sides posturing to extract better terms rather than a genuine breakdown in talks.
Regional mediators including Egypt Turkey and Pakistan are actively trying to construct an off ramp that could work politically for Trump even if Israel objects.
Why It Matters Global Stakes
This is not merely a bilateral dispute the knock on effects are already global
Energy markets The Strait of Hormuz closure is a direct tax on the world economy. 150 oil would hit consumers supply chains and inflation across dozens of countries.
Geopolitical distraction With Russia having launched its spring offensive in Ukraine some analysts note that the Iran war is drawing US strategic attention away from Europe.
Domestic US politics A new AP NORC poll found that a majority of Americans believe US military action against Iran has gone too far and concerns about fuel prices are rising creating real political pressure on Trump to find an exit.
Israels position Jerusalem has been lobbying hard for continued war but would likely halt its own strikes if the US declared a formal end to hostilities meaning Trump holds significant leverage over the conflicts tempo.
What to Watch Next
Whether Pakistan mediated backchannel talks produce any movement on the 15 point plan or a modified version.
New US or Israeli strike activity which would almost certainly collapse any diplomatic momentum.
Irans next wave of attacks particularly whether they target energy infrastructure inside Saudi Arabia or the UAE which would be a major escalation.
Oil price trajectory and whether 150 per barrel becomes a realistic near term scenario.
Domestic political pressure in Washington with opposition lawmakers and business lobbies increasingly vocal about the wars economic costs.
The situation remains deeply fluid. Both sides have strong incentives to keep talking and equally strong incentives domestic military and ideological to keep fighting. The next 72 hours will likely be telling.