Hostilities in the Persian Gulf may resume at a moment’s notice, Mehran Kamrava, professor of government at Georgetown University Qatar, explains to Sputnik.
The issue of frozen Iranian assets and lifting anti-Iranian sanctions still remains the sticking point in the talks.
Though the broad outline of the deal has been agreed upon, Donald Trump keeps trying to make new amendments, which may be regarded as untrustworthy by Iran.
For example, Iran wants US sanctions removed, whereas Trump wants sanctions relief to be “based on Iranian behavior.” He also insists that no frozen Iranian funds would be released as part of the deal, even though the draft agreement stipulates the release of half of these assets.
Then there is the issue of the deal’s format.
“The Iranians and the Americans have two very different conceptions of what a deal should look like,” Kamrava explains.
“The Iranians want a much slower deal, want to take their time with the deal and do not necessarily want a quick and speedy deal. Whereas the Americans want a quick and speedy deal.”
Israel, which repeatedly voiced its objections to the US-Iran rapprochement, remains a ‘wild card’ that can scuttle the peace deal.
Collapse of US-Iran Peace Deal a ‘Definite Likelihood’

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