
Obama Voices Scepticism Over Trump’s Ability to Improve on 2015 Iran Nuclear Pact
In a televised interview, Barack Obama contended that any new US-Iran agreement is unlikely to be markedly superior to the JCPOA, urging diplomacy over military action.
Barack Obama has cast doubt on the prospects for a substantially better nuclear deal between the United States and Iran, arguing that any agreement reached by President Donald Trump is unlikely to mark a tangible improvement over the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). In excerpts from an ABC News interview, the former president described expectations of a significantly different accord as unrealistic, noting that the original pact had functioned effectively for years before Washington’s unilateral withdrawal. His intervention comes as the Trump administration pushes for new negotiations, raising questions about whether the current effort can deliver more than its predecessor.\n\nObama stressed that the JCPOA’s framework – which limited Iran’s uranium enrichment and permitted international inspections in exchange for sanctions relief – was the product of painstaking diplomacy. ‘It is doubtful that any agreement that arises is going to be significantly different or a significant improvement from the deal that we had in the first place,’ he said. He explicitly favoured negotiation over military confrontation, observing that a treaty resolving 80 to 90 percent of the disputes is preferable to war. Viewed from Tehran, such remarks resonate amid mixed signals; while Iranian officials have engaged in indirect talks, conservative factions remain wary of any pact that does not guarantee full sanctions removal.\n\nRegional reactions underscore the geopolitical complexity. In European capitals, there is cautious optimism that a revived accord could stabilise the Gulf, though officials privately acknowledge the challenges of verifying compliance without the robust inspection regime of the original deal. Israeli analysts, however, are more forthright in their scepticism. Writing in the Jerusalem Post, a former national security adviser warns that an emerging memorandum of understanding between Washington and Tehran may contain undisclosed side agreements that could prove worse than the agreement Trump once derided as catastrophic. Such concerns reflect broader anxieties about Iran’s regional ambitions and ballistic missile programme, which remain outside the purview of current discussions.\n\nAs negotiators work towards a framework, the fundamental question remains: can Trump secure an accord that satisfies Washington’s demands while avoiding the military escalation Obama cautioned against? The former president’s comments highlight the enduring tensions between those seeking maximalist concessions and those who argue that imperfect diplomacy is preferable to conflict. With memories of the JCPOA’s collapse still fresh, the outcome will shape not only Iran’s nuclear trajectory but also the broader architecture of Middle Eastern security for years to come.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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The former US president acknowledges that any new agreement with Tehran is unlikely to be fundamentally better than the 2015 nuclear deal, which his country later abandoned. Iranian reports emphasize that even a partial solution is preferable to military conflict, reflecting a pragmatic defense of the original accord.
Israeli security commentators warn that Trump's emerging deal with Iran could be even more dangerous than the 2015 agreement, potentially restricting Israel's freedom to act. They argue that a mere memorandum of understanding might be interpreted as a catastrophe that fails to address Tehran's true nuclear ambitions.
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