News
Analysis
First
Round of U.S.-Iran Talks Ends With High Hopes and Big Challenges
Mediators
reported progress toward reaching a final deal within 60 days. They also said
that negotiators had dwelled on issues that were supposed to be settled.
Jim
Tankersley
By Jim
Tankersley
Reporting
from Zurich
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/22/world/europe/iran-us-peace-talks.html
June 22,
2026
Updated
8:01 a.m. ET
The
morning after the first overnight session of renewed talks between the United
States and Iran, aimed at turning an incomplete truce into a lasting peace
deal, the vibes were as warm as the heat wave currently washing over
Switzerland.
Mediators
from Pakistan and Qatar said early on Monday that Vice President JD Vance and
his Iranian counterparts had made “encouraging progress” toward the goal of
cementing a final peace agreement within 60 days. Swiss officials called the
outcome “constructive.”
“Yesterday
was a very, very good day,” Mr. Vance told reporters on Monday afternoon. “We
made a lot of good progress. We did exactly what we wanted to do.”
He added
that Iran had promised to readmit nuclear inspectors from the International
Atomic Energy Agency, a U.N. watchdog, though Iran did not immediately confirm
that.
But other
details that emerged from the luxury Bürgenstock Resort Lake Lucerne suggested
that the discussions over the next two months could still prove difficult and
that efforts to reach a deal could proceed in fits and starts.
Tehran’s
delegation, headed by the speaker of Parliament, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf,
walked away from the table on Sunday to protest a social media post from
President Trump that threatened to resume American attacks on Iran if a deal
did not come together. They eventually returned.
Perhaps
more important were the still-unresolved topics that appear to have dominated
much of the conversation.
The
60-day window, which was established by the initial memorandum of understanding
that Mr. Trump and Iran’s president signed last week, was meant to be a period
for Tehran and Washington to solve crucial issues left out of that first-step
deal. Most notably, that includes Iran’s nuclear ambitions. The memorandum says
that Iran will dilute its existing stockpile of near-weapons-grade nuclear
material but does not clarify how that will happen or whether the country will
be barred from producing such material in the future.
Those
issues were not center stage, aside from Mr. Vance’s mention of the I.A.E.A.
inspectors, whose return would still be far from a solution to the nuclear
question.
Instead,
the first talks focused largely on two topics that were supposed to be settled:
How to enforce a cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon, and how to
ensure shipping traffic, including oil tankers, flows freely again through the
Strait of Hormuz.
Israel
launched the war on Iran alongside the United States in February and was not
party to last week’s initial deal. Despite the deal’s call for a cease-fire,
both Israel and Hezbollah have continued to carry out attacks on each other.
Iran protested Israel’s attacks over the weekend by saying that it had closed
the Strait of Hormuz — which has been clogged throughout the war, sending
global oil prices skyward — though American officials said that ships were
still passing through.
Mediators
from Qatar and Pakistan, who joined Iranian and American officials at Lake
Lucerne, said Monday morning that discussions would continue through this week.
Financial
markets had reacted to Mr. Trump’s initial agreement with Iran “with a classic
show of irrational exuberance,” Carl B. Weinberg, the chief economist for High
Frequency Economics, an American analysis firm, wrote in a research note on
Monday morning. “This week should bring a reality check,” he noted.
Mr.
Weinberg added that he believed Iran was likely to string out the talks for
much longer than 60 days — all the way until January 2029, when the next
American president will take office.
The
stop-start nature of the negotiations has heightened the uncertainty.
Mr. Vance
had been scheduled to fly to Switzerland on Thursday night, but canceled the
trip at the last minute after Iran pulled out in protest, diplomats said, at
continuing Israeli attacks in Lebanon.
Nothing
in the statements from the mediators, or from Iranian officials, suggested that
the negotiations were barreling toward the sort of quick capitulation that Mr.
Trump has intimated would be the endgame for the talks. For example, Mr.
Ghalibaf wrote on social media that Iran’s “armed forces are prepared to
respond” if Mr. Trump attacked Iran again — raising the possibility of more
war.
Still,
the releases from the mediators and hosts conveyed, at the very least, a sense
that the talks had succeeded in starting the gears of a more traditional
diplomatic process.
Qatar and
Pakistan said that the discussions had led to “the creation of a mechanism for
further technical talks.” The Swiss authorities said that the parties had
agreed to “a road map aimed at reaching a final agreement within 60 days.”
“Our
aim,” Swiss officials wrote, “is that our diplomacy contributes to
de-escalation, stability and peace.”
Jim
Tankersley is the Berlin bureau chief for The Times, leading coverage of
Germany, Austria and Switzerland.


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