As Vance
Leads Iran Negotiations, Trump Creates Disruptions in His Path
Vice
President JD Vance is in a politically precarious spot.
Tyler
Pager
By Tyler
Pager
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/22/us/politics/jd-vance-iran-negotiations.html
June 22,
2026
As Vice
President JD Vance entered the fifth hour of negotiations with Iranian leaders
over the weekend, President Trump weighed in with an ill-timed threat to start
bombing again.
If the
Iranians closed the Strait of Hormuz, Mr. Trump told a Fox News reporter, the
negotiators talking to Mr. Vance would never make it back to their country — in
fact, they would have no country to return to at all.
For Mr.
Vance, this was the latest example of his increasingly tricky role as the
frontman in the U.S. negotiations with Iran, as Mr. Trump repeatedly creates
disruptions in his path.
On
Monday, Mr. Vance said the first round of talks had laid “a successful
foundation” for peace. But now, Mr. Vance will have to find a way to end a war
that he opposed at the start, while navigating his boss’s whims and an
adversary that has proved itself, at least in part, immune to Mr. Trump’s
threats.
“What we
told the Iranians yesterday is when you guys engage in what us millennials
might call trash talk, you can’t expect the president of the United States not
to respond and not to correct the record,” he said on Monday at a news
conference. “So when they say things that aren’t true, the president is going
to respond to it.”
Both
sides have signed a memorandum of understanding to end hostilities and are now
trying to strike a lasting nuclear deal in 60 days. But for Mr. Vance, the
presumptive favorite for the 2028 Republican nomination, the situation remains
politically precarious.
“If it
works out, I’m going to take the credit,” Mr. Trump said of the peace deal last
week. “If it doesn’t work out, I’m blaming JD.”
Mr. Vance
has said the president was joking, but Mr. Trump has never shied away from
deflecting blame onto others — and how Mr. Vance handles the future of the
negotiations will factor into Republicans’ performance in the midterm elections
and his future as a potential successor to Mr. Trump.
Karim
Sadjadpour, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
said Mr. Vance was in a risky spot. He could get credit for ending an unpopular
war, Mr. Sadjadpour said. Or he may end up being “viewed as the architect of an
American humiliation and a deal that concedes billions of dollars to a
committed U.S. adversary.”
Making
the situation even more difficult, the vice president must depend on the
cooperation of Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps commanders.
“That’s
not an auspicious position for any American politician, let alone an aspiring
president,” Mr. Sadjadpour said.
And even
as Americans are clamoring for the Trump administration to stop the fighting
and bring down energy costs, Mr. Sadjadpour argued that Americans seem to care
more about how wars end. He pointed out that President Joseph R. Biden Jr.
nose-dived in the polls after the withdrawal of American forces from
Afghanistan, during which 13 U.S. service members were killed.
“Americans
dislike wars, but they dislike defeats even more,” he said.
Almost
immediately after Mr. Vance left Switzerland, the foundation he outlined for a
possible longer-term deal started showing cracks. The vice president said Iran
had agreed to invite U.N. nuclear inspectors into the country, but the Iranians
said they had made “no new commitments.”
Mr. Vance
also described a potential funding scheme in which Qatar would unfreeze assets
for the Iranians to use to buy American soy, corn and wheat. Hours later, Mr.
Trump repeated that idea in the Oval Office and said food for the Iranian
population was “going to be bought exclusively through the United States from
our farmers.” Iranian officials rejected that idea and have said in the past
that the money will be going toward rebuilding its infrastructure.
Conflicting
narratives about the state of the negotiations have become commonplace in
recent weeks as American and Iranian officials try to appease their domestic
audiences and bring an end to the conflict.
Mr. Vance
tried to downplay the public disagreements.
“I would
just encourage the media: Mistrust a little bit what you see coming out of
Iranian social media,” he told reporters before boarding Air Force Two to
return to Washington. “They can be confusing negotiators, but we feel like
we’re making progress.”
It was a
markedly different tone than Mr. Vance’s last face-to-face meeting with the
Iranians when he spent 21 hours in Pakistan and left with “bad news” and said
they were not “able to make headway.” As Mr. Vance works to balance the
negotiations and his own political future, Mr. Trump has been quizzing aides
and allies over the last several months about whether they think Mr. Vance has
what it takes to win the presidency.
He often
compares him to Secretary of State Marco Rubio — and he will have another
opportunity to size up the two men this week when Mr. Rubio heads to the
Persian Gulf to discuss the Iran deal with allies.
When
asked how Mr. Vance and Mr. Rubio were doing, Mr. Trump said on Monday that
they were doing a “fantastic job.”
“Our
secretary is fantastic,” he said of Mr. Rubio. “I think he’s maybe going to go
down as the best ever. And I thought JD Vance this morning was fantastic. I
watched his news conference from Switzerland. He’s a very smart guy. He did a
great job.”
Tyler
Pager is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump
and his administration.


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