The reviews are coming in for Trump’s Memorandum of Understanding with Iran and the general consensus seems to be that it was largely a capitulation on his part, a grudging recognition that the grand aims that he outlined at the beginning of his and Israel’s war could not be realized with force and that he had to scale back his goals, even to achieving less than what had been in the previous JCPOA that was signed in 2015 and that he threw out. As Patrick Wintour, the Guardian‘s diplomatic editor, writes:
Only a man with an unparalleled ignorance of history such as Donald Trump would have signed America’s peace treaty with Iran at Versailles, the byword for national humiliation. And only a man with an impish sense of humour such as Emmanuel Macron would have suggested it.
It is easy to cast Trump in the role of the humiliated and hurt German Count Ulrich von Brockdorff-Rantzau. The treaty of Versailles after all was based on 14 points, just as the memorandum of understanding has 14 clauses.
But the memorandum is not a full-scale surrender document; it is an admission that America could not achieve what it sought through war.
If the memorandum, taken with Trump’s remarks at his hour-long press conference at the G7, is compared with the final document the Americans tabled in 2025, it is possible to see how far the US has been forced to retreat. Red line after red line has been erased.
The 2025 document was tabled by the US immediately before Israel – with US support – began the 12-day war culminating in the bombing of Iran’s nuclear sites. Under its terms, Iran would have had no domestic enrichment capabilities beyond the limited enrichment for medical and agricultural needs; all nuclear supply would be imported from outside Iran; all enriched uranium stockpiles would be shipped out of Iran immediately upon signing the agreement; all enriched stockpile material would be down-blended to 3.67%; Iran would not build any new enrichment facilities; and Iran would dismantle all programmes capable of uranium conversion. Instead, a consortium including Iran, the US and the Gulf states would undertake enrichment outside Iran.
But the MOU shows that it achieved far less than those goals.
What is worse from the US perspective is that all these concessions have been made to try to secure the reopening of the strait of Hormuz, which was open before the war, but even that may not be achieved.
So why did Trump agree? It was because even he could see that prolonging the closure of the strait of Hormuz was going to have lasting adverse repercussions.
Trump was very frank on Wednesday: the risk of a worldwide recession and oil reserves running out in a matter of weeks. He said: “The one president I did not want to be was the late, great Herbert Hoover,” referring to the president blamed for the Great Depression that wiped out savings and pitched millions into poverty. “I didn’t want to see economic catastrophe. If you kept this going, that could have happened.”
Inflation in the US has risen to 4.2% according to the latest report and even the new chair of the Federal Reserve did not do what Trump wanted him to do which was lower the interest rates. The 60-day deadline for many of the features of the MOU pushes the date to mid-August. It is clear that Trump and the Republicans are fretting over the electoral consequences of high inflation and are no doubt hoping that the end of the war and the resumption of oil flows will bring the inflation rate down in time for the mid-term elections.
But reducing the rate of inflation usually takes a long time. Furthermore, even if the rate goes down, prices will not go down, although Trump has promised that prices will decrease rapidly. That is not how these things work. Widespread and rapid reductions in prices only occur in periods of deflation and recession, which would create massive unemployment. Even if costs go down for manufacturers, they will try to keep their prices high to inflate their profits because people have been paying those prices, so people likely will be stuck with high prices, including for gas, for a long time.
Other analyses paint an even bleaker picture of the deal. This article analyzes each of the 14 points in the MOU, many of which defer final agreement for 60 days. This analysis described the right-wing discomfort with the MOU.
As Playbook detailed yesterday, the only concessions the U.S. has actually extracted so far represent a return to Iran’s pre-war positions — promising not to pursue a nuclear weapon, and allowing ships passage through the Strait of Hormuz. In return, Iran gets massive new financial investment, desperately needed sanctions relief and the now-certain knowledge that its leverage over Hormuz can deliver big geo-strategic and economic wins.
Beyond the MAGA cheerleaders, nobody seriously views this as a U.S. victory. The WSJ editorial board decries “the surrender of the Strait to the dictates of Iranian foreign policy.” The NYT’s veteran White House and national security correspondent David Sanger writes that “the Iranians emerged from a confrontation with the world’s most powerful military having not only survived, but with much to celebrate.” Israel is stunned. Tehran is gloating. And the oil industry is deeply unhappy, as POLITICO’s James Bikales and Carlos Anchondo write today for Pros.
It is clear why Trump tried to keep the details of the MOU secret for as long as possible, right up until the signing. He wanted to create a fait accompli, so that critics could not derail it and his allies had to sign on, however grudgingly. That may be the main tactical victory he got, despite all the deaths and destruction and suffering of ordinary people.

I think it’s too late to avoid superinflation, then super-recession and depression when the AI bubble bursts. It’s certainly too late to recover from helium and fertilizer shortages. So, too bad Trump, you had to surrender anyway, should have done it earlier.
Is Israel going to go along with this in *any* way? Such as, oh I don’t know, leaving Lebanon? Seems unlikely. More trouble to come there, I would think.
But, Trump signed the treaty at *Versailles*? I am shrieking! Naughty Macron!
Thank fuck for that. Could Tot finally be listening to some sane advisors? The alternatives don’t even bear thinking about. We’re not out of the woods yet though; even if the peacemakers can stop Israel trying their hardest to derail things, Tot won’t last much longer and there are plenty of warmongers in government (both parties) who think US supremacy needs to be asserted.
Israel has discovered they can drag us back into the war any time they want. This has already been set up, with Israel declaring they intend to keep part of Lebanon. Meanwhile the Lebanese and Hezbollah have been learning how the Ukrainians do war, and are starting to finally exhibit tactical good sense. The Israelis are deranged -- they just approved settlements in Gaza and the West Bank. They will try to pull the US into Lebanon again and if we have the right fascist in office it may work.
Iran has discovered some US-beating strategies and will reinforce them. My prediction is that they will temporarily shelve building nukes but will work on ICBMs that can reach New York and Washington. Lots and lots of them. More than that.
I thought Iran was dragging its feet on a peace agreement until it could demonstrate an ICBM. They did a long-range shot (with permission from Putin) that reached Siberia. If hostilities break out once they have that capability, the Brits will lose an RAF base, and maybe the reflecting pool’s problems will be fixed.
@Marcus #3:
I don’t see the point. It wouldn’t count as a threat. If Iran landed even one ICBM on US soil, they really would be nuked.
Iran does not need nukes. It has discovered just how effective it is to throttle the strait of Hormuz.
I’m unconvinced. For what it’s worth, my take is that they will focus on being able to bypass or overwhelm US air defences in the region, enabling them to strike nearby US bases, warships, and client states. They’re looking to become the dominant regional power, and the best way for them to do that is to drive wedges between the US and its local clients -- and the way they do that is by demonstrating that the US can’t protect them, and doesn’t really care about them. They can’t force the US to back off through direct attacks, and I don’t think they’re stupid enough to try.
It’s going to be very interesting to see if this deal can actually hold together.
Oh look, what a surprise: US-Iran talks abruptly called off after Israel and Hezbollah trade deadly attacks. Didn’t see that coming.
I heard this morning on NBC’s Today that Vance was posponing his trip to Switzerland to begin the 60 days of talks. The strikes that Dunc mentions @7 were in the report, but only one or two sentences near the end.
It’s way too early to predict what will happen with the “peace deal”, but I wouldn’t be surprised to discover:
– Israel continues bombing Lebanon with civilian casualties claiming without evidence that Hezbollah fired first.
– The stock market crashes and gas prices spike.
– Folks with inside information (Trump and his buddies) get richer.
In the shadow of the Versallies Treaty, Hegseth and the administration coninues with their beef with NATO.
.
Mallen Baker: “Trump’s First Major Step To Abandon NATO Announced”
.https://youtube.com/watch?v=RurhLxojibc
They are physically unable to understand the concept of “long-term consequences”.
Don’t forget that on January 18, 1871 King Wilhelm of Prussia was declared the Emperor of Germany in Versailles.
Now that the world’s tallest reflective pool has succesfully been converted to a algae growing incubator, and it’s blue paint has started to peel off, Trump has turned his attention to North Korea. Nothing to see here, move on.