
For days now, the world has been trying to decipher whether the United States and Iran are on the verge of a deal, the edge of another collapse, or simply trapped inside one of President Donald Trump’s familiar cycle of declarations, reversals and strategic ambiguity.
Depending on which statement you read, or which Trump Truth Social post appears on your phone first, there is either an agreement “in principle,” no agreement at all, or a historic diplomatic breakthrough still being negotiated somewhere between Washington, Tehran and teh Strait of Hormuz.
Even Trump himself appeared to acknowledge the confusion.
“Nobody has seen it, or knows what it is. It isn’t even fully negotiated yet,” he wrote on Truth Social this weekend. So what exactly is happening?
Is there actually a deal?
Not quite, at least not yet. What appears to exist is the outline of a possible agreement or a loose framework both sides are cautiously moving toward while continuing to negotiate key details.
US officials have said Washington and Tehran agreed “in principle” to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and continue talks over Iran’s nuclear program.
Iranian officials, meanwhile, have suggested negotiations over nuclear issues could continue for another 30 to 60 days.
That distinction matters, because a framework is not the same thing as a finalised agreement. And right now, many of the hardest questions, particularly surrounding Iran’s highly enriched uranium, remain unresolved .
Why does uranium matter so much?
Because uranium is where diplomacy collides with fear over nuclear weapons.
The proposed framework would reportedly require Iran to dispose of its stockpile of highly enriched uranium, but officials have not publicly explained exactly how that would happen.
According to Al Jazeera, Trump has pushed for the US to seize the material outright, a demand Iranian officials have strongly resisted.
Iran maintains its nuclear program is peaceful . Western governments, however argue that highly enriched uranium significantly shortens the path toward building a nuclear weapon.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio signalled over the weekend that the Trump administration may be open to a phased or interim arrangement instead of immediate dismantlement.
Why is the Strait of Hormuz so important?
Because the global economy runs through it. The Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway between Iran and Oman, carries roughly one fifth of the world’s oil supply.
Any disruption there can send oil prices surging and trigger fears of inflation and broader economic instability.
That is why reopening the strait has become central to the proposed agreement. US officials have framed it as one of the first immediate goals of any deal. But even here, uncertainty remains.
Officials have spoken about restoring maritime traffic, yet economists and analysts say nobody can confidently predict when shipping would fully normalise or when oil prices would stabilise.
So what happens next?
Nobody really knows yet. The current moment feels less like a finalised peace deal and more like a draft still being argued over in public.
There are broad outlines that include: reopen the Strait of Hormuz, reduce regional tensions, restart nuclear negotiations and somehow resolve the question of Iran’s uranium stockpile without either side appearing to surrender.
But major obstacles remain, as Iran’s leadership still has to approve any final agreement. And Trump himself has cautioned against rushing negotiations.
For now, what exists is less a finalised peace deal and more an ongoing negotiation being discussed in public before it is complete. And until the remaining questions are resolved, the confusion surrounding it is unlikely to go away.



