US-Iran Negotiations: A Strategy of Brinkmanship
While the fragile two-week ceasefire is set to expire this Wednesday, April 22, and despite the fact that the marathon direct talks in Islamabad led by Vice President JD Vance did not produce an agreement in the first round, a second round remains possible in the coming hours, even as Iran sends mixed signals.
The discussions between the United States and Iran are no longer a classic diplomatic process. They now follow a well-known logic among strategists: brinkmanship, or the strategy of pushing to the edge of the abyss. Popularized during the Cold War by John Foster Dulles, this approach consists of driving a crisis to its critical point to force the adversary to back down.
In the current context, marked by the ongoing American naval blockade of Iranian ports and the Strait of Hormuz, this logic deeply shapes the interaction between Washington and Tehran.
A Confrontation Disguised as Negotiation
Behind the official diplomatic channels, the two powers are in reality engaged in a test of strength.
The United States maintains a strategy of maximum pressure: reinforced economic sanctions, financial isolation, naval blockade, and displays of military power. The goal is clear: to create an unsustainable cost in order to force Iran to accept major concessions, particularly on its nuclear program.
Iran adopts the same logic, but with its own means. By threatening to resume uranium enrichment at high levels or to further disrupt traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, Tehran seeks to remind everyone that it can trigger a crisis with global repercussions, especially on energy markets.
This game is not about compromise, but about coercion.
Credibility as the Main Weapon
At the heart of brinkmanship lies a decisive element: the credibility of the threat. Each side must convince the other that it is ready to go all the way, even at the risk of major escalation. In this logic:
A technical announcement becomes a strategic signal;
A military move (or its absence) becomes a political message;
A lack of reaction itself becomes a form of pressure.
Negotiation thus turns into a theater of deterrence, where every gesture is interpreted, amplified, and tested.
Time as a Catalyst for Tension
Time plays a decisive role in this dynamic. The imminent deadline of the ceasefire acts as an accelerator of pressure. Each side bets on the other’s fear in the face of this limit:
Washington relies on gradual suffocation to obtain an Iranian retreat;
Tehran bets on the political, military, and energy cost of escalation to force the United States to soften its position.
But the closer the deadline gets, the more room for maneuver shrinks — and the greater the risk of error grows.
The Central Risk: Miscalculation
The major danger of brinkmanship lies in miscalculation — the error of judgment. If each actor overestimates the other’s caution or underestimates its determination, neither side backs down. Escalation then becomes mechanical, gradually escaping political control.
History has already shown how critical this dynamic can become, notably during the Cuban Missile Crisis. But the current situation is even more complex: it involves regional actors, global energy interests, and chains of reaction that are difficult to control.
Regional Spoilers: The Weight of Third Parties
This duel is never purely bilateral. “Spoilers” can push both sides even closer to the edge of the abyss:
Israel is the most visible spoiler: any concession perceived as too soft risks being immediately denounced by Tel Aviv.
The Gulf countries, while fearing open war, quietly support American pressure to weaken their historic rival.
Russia (and China) play an ambivalent role, hoping to benefit from expensive oil or an American weakening in the Middle East.
The Honorable Exit: Saving Face
For brinkmanship not to end in free fall, there must be an “honorable exit” that allows one side to step back without losing face:
For the United States: a “buy-time” agreement (long suspension of enrichment in exchange for gradual easing of sanctions), presented as a political victory.
For the Iran: the symbolic maintenance of a very limited right to civil enrichment, combined with a partial lifting of sanctions and recognition of its regional security interests.
Without this politically sellable way out, neither side will be able to retreat without risking internal collapse.
An Unstable Balance
What is happening today is an unstable balance based on the fear of the worst. The paradox of brinkmanship is that it can produce either a rapid de-escalation or a brutal rupture. Rationality becomes fragile, subject to pressure and timing. In this game of moving toward the abyss, the question is not only who will give in, but whether everyone will know how to stop in time.
#USIranTalks #Brinkmanship #IslamabadTalks
@KarimSadjadpour @AliVaez @SanamVakil

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