The newly brokered agreement between the United States and Iran effectively ends the so-called maximum pressure campaign pursued by the Trump administration. But it also reveals the constraints on American hegemony in a multipolar era. The pact, finalised in Vienna after months of indirect talks, freezes Iran’s uranium enrichment at 3.
67% in exchange for the lifting of secondary sanctions on oil exports and banking. For the Biden administration, the deal represents a pragmatic retreat from the brinkmanship that characterised its predecessor. Yet the terms are markedly less favourable than the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).
Iran retains advanced centrifuges and a stockpile of enriched material well beyond the original limits. The White House calls this a victory for diplomacy. In reality, it is an admission that the tools of coercion no longer yield the results they once did.
The failure of the Trump strategy was twofold. First, it underestimated the resilience of the Iranian economy, which adapted via parallel markets and barter arrangements. Second, it overestimated Washington’s ability to isolate Tehran, given China’s continued purchases of Iranian crude and Russia’s deepening security cooperation with the regime.
The new deal, therefore, is less a product of American leadership than of geopolitical recalibration. European capitals, eager to stabilise energy markets, pushed for an early settlement. The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, despite public scepticism, privately signalled they would not obstruct an agreement.
Their calculus was pragmatic: a nuclear-armed Iran was the greater risk. Critics on the American right decry the concessions as a sign of weakness. But the reality is that the United States no longer commands the unipolar leverage it held in 2015.
The rise of China as a creditor and consumer of Iranian oil, and Russia’s role as a diplomatic spoiler, have created a buffer for Tehran. Washington’s leverage is further diminished by its military entanglements in Ukraine and the Indo-Pacific. The deal thus marks a shift from unilateral imposition to managed competition.
For Iran, the outcome is a strategic validation. The regime weathered the storm of sanctions, assassination campaigns, and domestic unrest. It now emerges with a cut-down but legitimate nuclear programme, increased oil revenue, and restored diplomatic channels with Europe.
President Raisi can claim that resistance paid off. But the deal’s durability remains uncertain. The sunset clauses on enrichment restrictions begin expiring from 2026.
The International Atomic Energy Agency’s access to undeclared sites is still subject to negotiation. And any future US administration could again repudiate the accord. The deeper lesson is structural.
The post-Cold War era of American primacy is ending. The Iran deal, in its final form, reflects a world in which other powers impose checks on US action. For the Biden team, the challenge now is to institutionalise this new equilibrium before the next crisis erupts.
The war is over, but the limits of dominance have been made plain.








