Two Signatures, No Handshake: Why the US-Iran Peace Deal Hangs on the Next 60 Days
After four months of war, the US and Iran each signed a memorandum in Islamabad to stop the fighting — but they signed it separately, never in the same room, and the talks meant to turn it into a binding treaty just got postponed. That gap between a ceasefire and a real settlement is where wars restart, and this one is now running on a 60-day clock President Trump himself set.
Bottom Line
Two signatures on the same goal, gathered in two different rooms, is progress — but it is not peace. The real test isn't the document signed on June 17; it's whether the postponed talks resume, whether anyone in a fractured Tehran can deliver on them, and whether the 60-day deadline becomes a bridge or a tripwire.
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