The spectacle of American diplomacy under Donald Trump has always resembled a Victorian melodrama: grand gestures, sudden reversals, and a cast of characters seemingly unaware they are in a tragedy. The latest act unfolds with the former president announcing, with characteristic certitude, that a US-Iran deal will be signed this Sunday. Tehran, ever the cautious Persian cat, immediately casts doubt on the timing. This is not negotiation; it is a theatre of shadows, a dance of delusion that would make a Safavid vizier blush.
Let us recall, dear reader, that the last great American rapprochement with Iran was the 2015 JCPOA, a monument to multilateral patience that Trump himself tore down in 2018. Now he seeks to rebuild it, but on his own terms, with a tweet as his chisel and a deadline as his stone. The announcement reeks of the same impulsive bravado that saw him invite Kim Jong-un to a summit on a whim. North Korea remains an atomic hermit kingdom. History does not repeat, but it certainly stutters.
Tehran’s hesitation is not mere bureaucratic foot-dragging. It is a survival instinct honed over centuries of dealing with foreign powers, from the British and Russian empires to the American one. The Islamic Republic knows that a deal announced on a Sunday might be rescinded on a Monday, or that the man who makes the promise may no longer be in power by Tuesday. Moreover, the Iranian regime is playing for time, waiting to see whether Trump’s bluster will be backed by the coercive apparatus of the US state or if it is merely the noise of a candidate campaigning.
What we are witnessing is the intellectual decadence of modern statecraft. Diplomacy has become a brand extension. The deal is a product launch. The scepticism from Tehran is consumer caution. We have moved from the Congress of Vienna, where Metternich and Talleyrand reshaped Europe over months of patient negotiation, to a world where a Sunday is a firm deadline. It is the infantilisation of international relations.
For those of us who see historical cycles, this is the late Roman Republic’s ‘bread and circuses’ adapted for the 21st century: bread is sanctions relief; circuses are the media frenzy. But the barbarians are not at the gates; they are in the negotiation room, checking their iPhones. The national interest has been replaced by personal legacy. And the deal, if it comes, will be as fragile as a Roman treaty with Parthia, signed in haste, regretted at leisure.
Let us hope, for the sake of global stability, that Mr Trump’s confidence is not misplaced. But I, for one, will not hold my breath. The ghost of the Shah haunts these talks: a monarch who trusted America and was abandoned. In the bazaars of Tehran, they have long memories. They remember that a Sunday promise can be a Monday betrayal.












