The Long War of Attrition: Iran, Trump, and the Nuclear Deadlock
By Struan Stevenson
A strange
calm has descended across the Gulf. Occasional tankers again edge through the
Strait of Hormuz. Diplomats shuttle between capitals. Donald Trump hints at
flexibility. Tehran signals openness to Chinese mediation. Yet beneath the
surface lies a brutal reality — the Iran war has entered a dangerous stalemate.
Neither side can claim outright victory. The clerical regime in Tehran lacks
the economic strength, military reach, and public legitimacy required for
prolonged confrontation. Meanwhile, the United States and Israel have
discovered that air power alone cannot erase decades of nuclear development
buried deep beneath mountains and military compounds. Missiles can devastate
infrastructure. They cannot destroy scientific knowledge.
That leaves
the world facing the central question: how does this end? The first truth
demanding recognition concerns uranium enrichment. The mullahs will never
surrender every aspect of their so-called ‘civilian’ nuclear program. National
pride, regime survival, and strategic leverage all hinge upon maintaining at
least some enrichment capability. Equally, Washington and Jerusalem will never
accept a threshold nuclear state capable of sprinting toward a bomb within
weeks. A durable settlement, therefore, requires compromise from both sides.
Trump’s
reported suggestion of a 20-year pause in Iran’s civilian nuclear program
reflects one possible framework. Yet Tehran would view a total freeze as
humiliation imposed under fire. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei built his authority
around resistance to Western coercion. His successors believe that acceptance
of complete suspension could trigger fractures inside the Revolutionary Guards
(IRGC) and among hardline clerics already questioning the regime’s direction. A
more realistic formula would permit tightly monitored low-level enrichment for
civilian energy purposes, perhaps capped at 3.67 percent purity under intrusive
international inspection.
The real
obstacle lies with Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium. Tehran now
possesses material enriched far beyond civilian requirements. Retaining such
stockpiles leaves Israel convinced that Iran remains only weeks from
weaponization. Removing that uranium, therefore, forms the key to any
diplomatic breakthrough. Could Iran transfer its highly enriched uranium to
China or another third country? Such a proposal may offer the most practical
escape route from the present impasse. Russia once played precisely this role
during earlier nuclear arrangements, receiving enriched uranium in exchange for
reactor fuel. Given Moscow’s growing entanglement in Ukraine and its military
partnership with Tehran, China now appears the more credible candidate. Beijing
enjoys strong relations with Iran while maintaining enormous economic interests
in Gulf stability. Chinese leaders view uninterrupted energy flows as essential
to their economy. A Chinese-supervised uranium custody arrangement could
therefore provide all sides with political cover. Iran could claim its nuclear
rights remain intact.
China could
present itself as a global peacemaker. Trump could declare that bomb-grade
uranium had left Iranian territory. Israel could gain precious warning time
against any future breakout attempt.
Such a
framework would demand the toughest verification regime ever imposed upon the
Islamic Republic. Continuous International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
monitoring, snap inspections, and severe automatic sanctions for violations
would remain essential. Trust carries little currency in Tehran, Washington, or
Jerusalem.
Meanwhile,
the wider strategic landscape has shifted dramatically during this conflict.
The Strait of Hormuz no longer holds the same monopoly power it once enjoyed.
Gulf states have learned painful lessons from repeated crises. The United Arab
Emirates has accelerated construction of a major new pipeline bypassing Hormuz
entirely, linking Abu Dhabi oil fields directly to Fujairah on the Gulf of
Oman. Saudi Arabia already operates east-west pipelines across its territory
toward the Red Sea. Iraq has revived discussion of alternative export corridors
through Turkey and Jordan.
Every new
bypass pipeline weakens Iran’s ability to threaten global energy markets. That
development carries profound consequences for the mullahs. For decades, Tehran
wielded Hormuz as a geopolitical hostage note pointed at the world economy.
“Pressure us,” the regime implied, “and oil prices explode.” Yet as alternative
export routes multiply, Iran’s leverage steadily erodes. At the same
time, economic
collapse inside Iran accelerates. Years of sanctions, corruption, and
military spending have hollowed out the country’s economy. Inflation ravages
working families. Water shortages spread across provinces. Electricity
blackouts fuel public fury. The currency continues its downward spiral. Young
Iranians increasingly view the aging clerical elite as
parasites clinging to power through repression alone.
The recent
war deepened that anger. Countless casualties, shattered infrastructure and
mounting hardship have intensified resentment toward a regime already facing a
profound legitimacy crisis after years of protests led by women, students,
workers and ethnic minorities. The mullahs’
regime, therefore, faces a lethal paradox. Any major concession to
Washington risks appearing weak. Any refusal to compromise risks economic
implosion and renewed nationwide uprising. That explains the regime’s foreign
minister Abbas Araghchi’s carefully calibrated diplomacy. Tehran seeks
negotiations because the regime desperately needs breathing space. Yet it also
seeks Chinese involvement to avoid appearing cornered by the United States.
Trump,
meanwhile, confronts his own strategic dilemma. Another endless Middle Eastern
war would drain American resources while benefiting China and Russia. Voters
across the political spectrum show little appetite for prolonged military
entanglement. Trump seeks a dramatic deal capable of projecting strength
without requiring occupation or regime change. Yet time works against the
clerical regime. Iran today resembles the Soviet Union during its final decade,
militarily dangerous yet economically exhausted, ideologically rigid yet
internally brittle. The state still commands powerful instruments of repression
through the IRGC and Basij militias. Even so, fear alone rarely sustains
regimes forever once economic despair merges with generational revolt.
The greatest
danger now lies in miscalculation. A single missile strike, tanker seizure, or
assassination could collapse negotiations overnight. Israel remains deeply
skeptical of any arrangement leaving enrichment capacity inside Iran.
Hardliners in Tehran still dream of strategic endurance through resistance.
Across Washington, many voices continue advocating military escalation rather
than compromise. Yet absolute victory remains beyond reach for all sides. That
reality leaves only one viable path forward — limited enrichment under
intrusive inspection, removal of highly enriched uranium to third-party
custody, regional energy diversification beyond Hormuz, and gradual economic
reintegration tied directly to Iranian compliance.
Struan
Stevenson was a member of the European Parliament representing Scotland
(1999-2014), president of the Parliament’s Delegation for Relations with Iraq
(2009-14), and chairman of the Friends of a Free Iran Intergroup (2004-14). He
is an author and international lecturer on the Middle East.
This
article was originally published on townhall
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