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A weakened Iran and a flexing America maneuver in run-up to pivotal talks

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Khalil Hamra/AP
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi speaks with journalists in Istanbul, Jan. 30, 2026. He says that talks between his country and the United States should be 鈥渇air and equitable.鈥

Top American and Iranian negotiators are due to begin talks Friday in Oman after a nearly nine-month hiatus, during which dramatic events on the ground have transformed the strategic playing field in Washington鈥檚 favor 鈥 and against Iran鈥檚.

Beneath the shadow of a significant U.S. military build-up aimed at Iran, there are raised expectations at the White House that it can impose a maximalist deal. President Donald Trump has threatened to strike 鈥渨ith speed and violence鈥 if Iran does not agree to diminish its strategic capacities.

Iran鈥檚 supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, countered this week that any American attack will trigger a regional war and lead to a 鈥渄ecisive blow鈥 against the United States. The issue, he said, is that the U.S. 鈥渨ants to devour Iran.鈥

Why We Wrote This

U.S.-Iran talks set for Friday were briefly canceled, then revived at the urging of Arab governments. But the two adversaries鈥 preferred agendas are very different. Amid reciprocal threats, does each side have a realistic grasp of what is at stake?

Indeed, Washington sees Iran weakened by 12 days of Israeli bombardment last June, by U.S. strikes then against Iran鈥檚 deeply buried nuclear facilities, and by Israel鈥檚 two-year degradation of Iran鈥檚 regional 鈥淎xis of Resistance鈥 allies that began with its war against Hamas in Gaza.

Also contributing today to the Islamic Republic鈥檚 sense of vulnerability is the political aftermath of nationwide anti-regime protests that it crushed with unprecedented brutality last month, leaving thousands dead. The residual anger is so deep that some Iranians say they now welcome U.S. strikes on their own country 鈥 if only to punish the regime.

The combined pressures present Iran鈥檚 leaders with a crisis unlike any they have faced, even as they mark the 47th anniversary of their self-declared 鈥済overnment of God,鈥 with plans for large public marches.

Last-minute revisions

Iran insisted at the last minute on changing the talks鈥 venue from Turkey to Oman, and on limiting them to nuclear issues, while the United States wants much wider concessions. Arab countries and Turkey, concerned that U.S. strikes would spark a regional conflict, convinced the White House to accept the changed venue and a revised agenda.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 problematic is that I don鈥檛 think the Iranians have digested that this isn鈥檛 quite the negotiation they want it to be,鈥 says Sanam Vakil, director of the Middle East and North Africa Program at Chatham House, a London-based think tank. 鈥淪o, as usual, they are trying to make demands and extract concessions the whole way.鈥

UGC/AP
A slogan, written in Farsi, is seen on a wall during an antigovernment protest in Tehran, Jan. 10, 2026. It's translation reads, "Death to dictator."

鈥淭rump is unpredictable, and Trump isn鈥檛 afraid 鈥 and the Iranians should have absorbed this 鈥 to use coercion and force,鈥 she adds.

Mr. Trump said on Wednesday that the ayatollah 鈥渟hould be very worried鈥 about strikes. As protests grew in Iran in early January, triggered by economic grievances, Mr. Trump vowed to 鈥渉it very hard鈥 if protesters there were killed.

At the height of Iran鈥檚 crackdown, Mr. Khamenei mocked the president鈥檚 promise to 鈥渞escue鈥 protesters, saying, 鈥淭rump should know that world tyrants ... were brought down at the peak of their arrogance. He, too, will be brought down.鈥

Yet, after the uprising was crushed and the high toll began to emerge, Mr. Trump encouraged Iranians to 鈥渢ake over鈥 their institutions, and said, 鈥淗elp is on the way.鈥

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 die to get a nuclear deal鈥

Among Iranian protesters who took Mr. Trump at his word 鈥 and said his city was 鈥渢ruly like a battle zone鈥 鈥 was an accountant and father of two in Khorramabad, in western Iran, who asked not to be named for his protection.

鈥淓veryone I know is extremely disappointed with all the rumors about negotiations,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 die to get a nuclear deal; we wanted these thugs to go. People think Trump has betrayed them very, very badly.鈥

He goes on to say that many Iranians daily track the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and have 鈥渂ecome military and navigation experts [who] know precise specifications鈥 of U.S. naval ships.聽

鈥淧eople are desperate for intervention, because after what we saw with the massacres, we now understand that this regime only knows the language of force, from a party more powerful than them,鈥 he says, adding: 鈥淢any would have opposed intervention before the bloodbath on Jan. 8 and 9, but trust me, now it is quite different. We have no one else to cling to, other than America, because it is the only power that can teach [the regime] a painful lesson.鈥

Some 6,883 deaths have been confirmed, and 11,280 other fatalities remain 鈥渦nder investigation,鈥 according to the Human Rights Activists News Agency, which has tabulated accurate casualty tolls in the past. The killings far outstrip the lethal scale of any previous crackdown on protests in Iran.

Mr. Khamenei has been warned in high-level meetings about the increased risk of renewed protests if the U.S. strikes, Reuters reported this week.

鈥淎n attack combined with demonstrations by angry people could lead to a collapse [of the ruling system],鈥 an Iranian official told the news agency. 鈥淭hat is the main concern among the top officials, and that is what our enemies want.鈥

Broader U.S. demands

While U.S. officials say President Trump prefers a deal, reported U.S. demands include halting nuclear enrichment, limiting missile range, and ending support for regional militia allies 鈥 points that Iran says are unacceptable and amount to surrender.

鈥淥ptics do matter, and this is really a problem,鈥 said Alex Vatanka, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute in Washington, at a panel discussion on Tuesday.

鈥淧resident Trump likes a quick win, and he wants to come out and say, 鈥楾he other guy just told me I was right and he was wrong, and I win.鈥 That鈥檚 not going to work with the Islamic Republic,鈥 said Mr. Vatanka. 鈥淜hamenei will not come out and say he was wrong, that he鈥檚 dragged the country through this mud for 22 years, only to give up something [Iran鈥檚 nuclear program] he could have given up as early as 2003.鈥

Doron Berti/Reuters
A U.S. Navy warship is seen off Eilat in southern Israel after it had docked at the port city, Feb. 1, 2026.

Humiliation, he said, is also a factor. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if the White House takes that into account. Or maybe they do, and they want ... to make an example out of the Islamic Republic and say to any other country around the world, 鈥楾his is what happens to you if you stand up to the United States.鈥欌

That said, 鈥淚 think there is a deal to be made. ... I suspect that鈥檚 what the Trump team wants,鈥 said Mr. Vatanka. 鈥淚鈥檓 not hearing or seeing evidence of a major project aimed at transforming Iran. ... What I am seeing is more and more of a, 鈥業ran is weak, let鈥檚 get a better deal, and then the president can call it a victory and move onto the next file.鈥欌

But getting to that point will be a challenge.

In 2018, Mr. Trump withdrew the U.S. from a 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers, negotiated during the Obama administration, which Iran had been adhering to. Mr. Trump called it the 鈥渨orst deal ever鈥 and imposed 鈥渕aximum pressure鈥 sanctions on Iran.

Mr. Khamenei reacted by banning 鈥渁ny talks鈥 with America, which he said 鈥渘ever remains loyal to its promises.鈥 Talks with Mr. Trump鈥檚 White House were 鈥渄oubly forbidden.鈥

In 2020, Mr. Trump ordered the assassination in Baghdad of Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the architect of Iran鈥檚 regional Axis of Resistance strategy. And last June, Israel launched its surprise attacks even while the U.S. and Iran were due to hold a round of talks in Oman.

Dissent from hard-liners

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi have called for 鈥渇air and equitable鈥 talks. Mr. Trump has used the same language.

But hard-line Iranian lawmaker Amirhossein Sabeti told Parliament this week that Iranians 鈥渁re waiting for a pre-emptive strike against Israel and U.S. bases in the region. They do not want [the Pezeshkian team] to once again pursue a misguided strategy of negotiating with the United States. Didn鈥檛 they bomb Iran last time, while talks were still underway?鈥

鈥淭his is a [ruling] system that ultimately is deeply competitive, not over existential issues, but the critical issues that will define the future trajectory of the Islamic Republic,鈥 says Dr. Vakil of Chatham House. 鈥淥n existential issues, they rally together. But on future-proofing the system, like negotiations with the United States, there isn鈥檛 a rally-around-the-regime effect.

鈥淵ou can see this playing out going into the negotiations. And, for better or worse, Khamenei isn鈥檛 yet reining in the competing power centers in a way that he should, if he wanted a deal 鈥 or if he recognized the existential nature of the moment,鈥 she says.

An Iranian researcher contributed to this report.

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