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Deals and Detours


Emerging World (Dis)Order

The agreement Washington and Tehran signed electronically this week is being characterized as the end of the war, but that assessment is likely an overstatement. The document is a sixty-day interim memorandum which gives both sides a way to pause the fighting, but structural disagreements remain which could derail the diplomatic track. 

Iranian officials continue to signal that tens of billions in frozen assets will be released over the sixtyday window, including around $12 billion available as soon as the MoU is signed in-person on Friday, paired with a suspension of oil‑related sanctions. Washington rejects that interpretation and maintains that dismantling Iran’s highly enriched uranium stockpile is a prerequisite for any financial movement. The two governments are effectively describing different versions of the same agreement, a reflection of how far apart they remain on core objectives. 

Four months of fighting have damaged elements of Iran’s missile arsenal, airdefense network, and proxy infrastructure, but the core architecture of the Islamic Republic remains intact. In that context, the diplomatic clock now appears to run in Tehran’s favor.  

If the interim agreement opens the door to financial relief without securing enforceable concessions on the nuclear file or Iran’s missile program, it risks transforming time into a strategic asset for Iran. The IRGC may calculate that once money begins to flow and the conflict fades from the headlines, Washington will struggle to summon the political will to re‑escalate militarily should Tehran walk back its commitments later in the process. 

Inside Tehran, IRGC hardliners continue to treat power projection in the Strait of Hormuz as a central priority. Despite US insistence that the waterway reopen without restrictions, traders and insurers are already preparing for the possibility that Iran will introduce “service fees” for transiting vessels—a move that would convert wartime leverage into peacetime revenue. 

For now, the MoU is perhaps best understood as a pause for two sides unwilling to continue fighting, yet equally unwilling to compromise on the issues that brought them to war in the first place. 


Weekly Wildcard

The strike that killed Tren de Aragua leader Héctor “Niño” Guerrero in Venezuela last Friday is being celebrated in Washington as a counter-narcotics success, but the more significant development is the cooperation model behind it. The operation was reportedly conducted in “close coordination” with Venezuelan authorities—meaning the interim government installed after Nicolás Maduro’s capture is now participating in joint kinetic action with the United States. 

The Pentagon is framing the Guerrero operation as a template for future missions, a model in which a partner government authorizes US military force against a domestic target on its own soil. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has already signaled that similar actions are planned in countries such as Ecuador and Honduras under the newly announced Americas Counter Cartel Coalition (A3C)—a framework that blends US intelligence and military capabilities with local authorities to target cartel leadership and infrastructure. 

Unlike the maritime interdictions off the coast of Venezuela earlier this year—which operated in a legal gray zone and generated political resistance—securing the consent of regional governments gives Washington a clearer legal pathway to pursue its antinarcotics objectives, while partner states gain political cover and operational support. Consent—even if manufactured—becomes the mechanism that legitimizes US involvement. 

The key variable to watch is whether the next strike proceeds over the objection of a major regional government. The risk is that a unilateral operation on Mexican or Colombian territory could force a public rupture and deliver unwanted consequences that extend into trade, security cooperation, and the broader regional diplomatic architecture. The emerging model is durable only as long as it remains consensual. 

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