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US-Iran Nuclear Deal Under Threat From Internal Political Pressures

Analysts and diplomatic observers are warning that domestic political pressures inside both the United States and Iran risk derailing ongoing negotiations toward a nuclear peace agreement, casting fresh uncertainty over a diplomatic process that has moved fitfully toward a potential breakthrough.

In Washington, hardliners opposed to any accommodation with Tehran continue to exert pressure on the administration, while congressional voices on both sides of the aisle have questioned the durability of any deal. In Tehran, conservative factions within the political establishment and elements tied to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps are believed to be resistant to the concessions that a meaningful agreement would require.

The warning reflects a recurring pattern in US-Iran diplomacy, where progress at the negotiating table has repeatedly been undermined by internal political dynamics on both sides. Past episodes, including the collapse and revival of the 2015 JCPOA, illustrate how susceptible such frameworks are to domestic political reversals.

Diplomats familiar with the talks caution that the window for a viable agreement may be narrow, and that both governments face diminishing political space to make the compromises necessary to close a deal. The international community, including Pakistan which has an interest in regional stability, is watching the trajectory closely.

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Sources: Dawn
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