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How Iran-US Nuclear Negotiations Could Redefine the Future of Nuclear Diplomacy
The Business Guardian
|May 24, 2025
The United Nations, European Union, and United States imposed multiple rounds of economic sanctions targeting Iran's energy, banking, and trade sectors. These measures crippled the Iranian economy, leading to inflation, unemployment, and a severe reduction in oil exports.

As the United States and Iran prepare to resume nuclear negotiations for the fifth time this year, the world watches with bated breath. Set in Rome, the latest round of diplomacy marks a critical juncture—not only in the decades-long animosity between the two nations but also in the evolving architecture of global nuclear governance. With U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, and Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi leading their respective delegations, the outcome of these talks could redefine the direction of nuclear diplomacy, reshape Middle Eastern security, and challenge the future of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) itself.
FROM COOPERATION TO CONFRONTATION Iran's nuclear story is paradoxical. In 1957, under the U.S.-led "Atoms for Peace" program, Iran signed a nuclear cooperation agreement with Washington. The deal allowed Iran to acquire civilian nuclear technology and laid the groundwork for what was initially a mutually beneficial partnership. This was further formalized when Iran became a signatory to the NPT in 1968 and began to using nuclear energy only for peaceful purposes. However, the Islamic Revolution in 1979 dramatically shifted Iran's political landscape. The new regime viewed nuclear capability not just as a technological achievement but as a matter of national sovereignty and security. Iran's cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) declined sharply, raising red flags globally. By the early 2000s, the Iranian nuclear program had expanded significantly. Enrichment facilities like the Natanz Enrichment Plant came online, and Iran began to assert its right to develop nuclear technology under the NPT framework. But suspicions arose over Iran's true intentions, with Western nations alleging that Tehran was secretly pursuing nuclear weapons capability—a claim Iran has consistently denied.
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