Iran Nuclear Diplomatic
Qatar Races to Seal US-Iran Nuclear Deal Amid Mounting Pressure
A Qatari negotiating team arrived in Tehran on Saturday to help finalize what Saudi-owned Al Arabiya described as a comprehensive nine-point agreement between the United States and Iran, with a final draft potentially ready to announce within hours. The development came as Secretary of State Marco Rubio told NATO allies that President Trump is "very disappointed" with their stance on the Iran conflict, and Iran's Foreign Minister separately informed the UN Secretary-General that the United States was making "excessive demands" — a combination of signals that analysts characterized as a critical and volatile negotiating moment.
Qatar's mediating role reflects years of diplomatic infrastructure built through its parallel relationships with Washington and Tehran. The fact that Doha was willing to put its credibility behind a final push suggested real momentum, even as Iran rejected US claims linking it to a drone strike on a UAE nuclear plant and Russia declared readiness to help resolve the uranium dispute — positioning Moscow simultaneously as a potential facilitator and a strategic rival to American influence.
The economic stakes are already visible in financial markets. Economists have more than doubled their US inflation forecasts, attributing the revision to what they described as an "energy shock" from the Iran conflict. JPMorgan chief executive Jamie Dimon warned that interest rates "could be much higher from here," and fed funds futures reflected growing odds of rate hikes rather than the cuts that had been anticipated earlier this year.
Trump faces domestic political pressure to produce results, with his approval rating at a career low of 31 percent and polling showing erosion across traditional Republican constituencies. A diplomatic breakthrough with Iran could provide the kind of foreign policy achievement that historically lifts presidential approval ratings, though the path remains uncertain given the multiplicity of actors involved.
The negotiations cannot be disentangled from a broader web of simultaneous crises. Russia conducted nuclear munitions deliveries to Belarus during what were described as its largest military exercises in years, while Bloomberg reported that President Putin was seeking to end the Ukraine conflict by year's end — using the Iranian crisis, analysts noted, as strategic leverage. Sixteen Chinese military aircraft were detected near Taiwanese waters in the same 24-hour period, underscoring the degree to which each regional flashpoint was shaping the dynamics of the others.