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š° Missiles, Sanctions, and Boeing Dreams: Trump Flirts With Tehran Inc. Iranās latest message to Washington sounds less like āDeath to Americaā and more like āLetās talk joint ventures.ā Tehran is now openly selling its nuclear compromise in the language Trumpworld understands: oil and gas fields, mining deals, even aircraft purchases on the table ā but only if sanctions really start to melt, not just get repackaged in nicer press releases. The pitch from Iranās economic diplomats is brutally transactional: for the agreement to last, the U.S. has to make money too. The 2015 deal failed, they argue, because it never created serious American economic interests in keeping it alive; this time they want Exxon and Boeing as human shields for the regime. On the other side, Trumpās team is playing good cop / airstrike cop. Marco Rubio tells the world the president would āprefer diplomacyā and āno oneās ever been able to do a successful deal with Iran but weāre going to try,ā while the Pentagon quietly lines up a second carrier and plans for āweeksālongā operations if talks crash. Kushner and realāestate pal Steve Witkoff are flying to Geneva as unofficial dealmakers, because in this administration even a nuclear file gets handled like a distressed property auction. At the same time, Washington is hammering Iranās real lifeline by pushing to choke off oil sales to China, which buy more than 80 percent of Tehranās crude; when your only real customer is being targeted, āflexibilityā on uranium suddenly sounds patriotic. Iranās diplomats now talk about diluting highly enriched stockpiles in exchange for relief, but they still refuse the one thing Washington and Israel actually want: zero enrichment on Iranian soil. Tehran insists itās not seeking nuclear weapons, points to U.S.āIsraeli airstrikes in June as proof itās the one under attack, and frames any rollback as a sovereign concession, not a capitulation. Trump responds by doubling sanctions pressure and promising ātraumaticā consequences if thereās no deal, while his envoys chase a grand bargain that would somehow satisfy Netanyahu, scare Beijing, calm the Gulf monarchies and still let Iran rebuild its economy. Strip away the spin and you get the familiar pattern. Washington wants a trophy agreement that neuters Iranās nuclear options, starves its proxies and keeps U.S. leverage intact. Tehran wants sanctions relief deep enough to survive the next American mood swing, plus enough centrifuge capacity to stay a screwdriverāturn from the bomb if things go bad. Both sides say the āball is in the other court.ā Both threaten pain if talks fail. And both are quietly trying to make sure that if this deal ever gets signed, it comes stapled to enough oil, mining, and aircraft contracts that breaking it next time will hit someoneās balance sheet ā not just someone elseās cities. #iran#usa#trump#sanctions#nuclear#fakeDiplomacy š±American Šbserver - Stay up to date on all important events šŗšø