What to
Know About U.S.-Iran Negotiations
The
United States is discussing ways to end hostilities with Iran, even as
President Trump continues to threaten attacks and as the Pentagon dispatches
more troops.
Aaron
Boxerman Adam Rasgon
By Aaron
Boxerman and Adam Rasgon
March 25,
2026, 10:49 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/25/world/middleeast/us-iran-war-talks-trump.html
President
Trump says the United States is talking to Iran about ways to end their
hostilities, even as he threatens more attacks and the Pentagon dispatches more
troops to the Middle East, and as Tehran has publicly denied any diplomatic
progress.
Nearly a
month after the United States and Israel launched their attack on Feb. 28, the
war with Iran has drawn in countries across the region and set off an energy
crisis that experts say is worse than the oil shocks of the 1970s. Pakistan has
emerged as a interlocutor between Washington and Tehran, and is said to have
passed a 15-point U.S. peace plan to Iran.
Here’s
what we know about the negotiations so far.
What is
the U.S. saying?
President
Trump announced on Monday that the United States was negotiating with Iran over
a “total resolution of our hostilities in the Middle East.”
Speaking
just before an initial deadline he had set for Iran to open the Strait of
Hormuz, the shipping lane that has largely been closed amid Tehran’s
retaliatory strikes, Mr. Trump sounded optimistic, saying, “We have major
points of agreement.”
Mr. Trump
has said the U.S. demands include an end to Iranian nuclear enrichment, which
Tehran has refused in previous rounds of talks.
And the
president has sent mixed signals. He has said that if Iran did not end its
blockade of the Strait of Hormuz by Friday, he would order a massive
bombardment of Iranian energy infrastructure. And the Pentagon has dispatched
about 2,000 paratroopers to begin moving to the Middle East to give Mr. Trump
additional military options.
What is
Iran saying?
Iranian
officials have downplayed Mr. Trump’s assertions that negotiations with the
United States had taken place, although they have acknowledged receiving
American messages.
Mohammad
Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of Iran’s Parliament, described Mr. Trump’s
announcement as an attempt to bring down runaway oil prices. And he sounded a
note of defiance on Wednesday in response to the news of the new U.S. troop
deployment, saying, “Do not test our resolve to defend our land.”
But
Iran’s Foreign Ministry conceded that there had been what it called regional
initiatives aimed at reducing tensions, according to the state-run news agency
Mizan.
Iran has
been attacked by Israel or the United States twice over the past year. Both
assaults followed rounds of intensive negotiations, making Iranian officials
suspicious that diplomatic outreach is a ruse ahead of further military action.
What
about the Strait of Hormuz?
A
critical issue in talks will be securing safe passage through the Strait of
Hormuz for oil and gas tankers from U.S. allies like Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
The Iranian stranglehold on the critical waterway has threatened the flow of
about one-fifth of the world’s annual oil supplies.
Iran has
sent a letter to the United Nations’ maritime organization saying that
“nonhostile” ships could pass safely through the strait, meaning vessels that
“neither participate in nor support acts of aggression against Iran” nor belong
to the United States or Israel.
On
Tuesday, Mr. Trump said the Iranians had offered him a “very big present” on
the strait, without elaborating. It was not clear if Mr. Trump’s comments were
referring to the Iranian letter.
Who will
negotiate for the U.S.?
Mr. Trump
said that Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Vice President JD Vance were
engaging in the talks with Iran. Steve Witkoff, one of Mr. Trump’s top
negotiators, and Jared Kushner, his son-in-law, were also involved in the
effort, he added.
Mr.
Kushner and Mr. Witkoff have been central to U.S. efforts to resolve at least
two other major conflicts: Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Israel’s war with
Hamas in the Gaza Strip. They were also negotiating with Iran before the war
began last month; Mr. Witkoff has said that Iranian intransigence in those
talks led Mr. Trump to launch the war.
Who will
speak for Iran?
It is far
less clear who could handle talks on the Iranian side.
Much of
Iran’s leadership was killed in the opening blow of the U.S.-Israeli air
assault, including the longtime autocratic ruler, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. That
has created some confusion about who is calling the shots in the country.
The
Pakistani military chief of staff, Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir, has discussed
peace efforts with Mr. Ghalibaf, the Iranian parliamentary speaker, according
to Iranian and Pakistani officials.
But Iran
may have trouble responding quickly to American outreach. Senior Iranian
officials have been struggling to communicate internally and they worry that
Israel could bomb them if they meet in person, the officials added.
Mr. Trump
did not identify his Iranian interlocutor except to say that it was a “top
guy.” He also said it was not Ayatollah Khamenei’s son, Mojtaba Khamenei, who
succeeded his father as the supreme leader of Iran but has not shown his face
since his ascension earlier this month.
Can they
reach a deal?
The
15-point U.S. plan addresses Iran’s ballistic missile and nuclear programs, as
well as the Strait of Hormuz, The New York Times has reported.
The Trump
administration is eager to find a favorable resolution to the conflict, which
has battered the Iranian government but failed to topple it; sent oil and gas
prices skyrocketing; and prompted criticism from Mr. Trump’s right-wing base.
But it is
still difficult to see a diplomatic offramp without either the United States or
Iran backing away from one of their red lines. Iran has long insisted on its
sovereign right to enrich uranium to high levels — contradicting a core U.S.
demand — even as it has denied seeking a bomb.
What is
Israel saying?
It was
unclear whether a possible American-Iranian cease-fire would bind Israel, which
has been striking Iran alongside the United States and has also escalated
attacks against the Iranian-backed group Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Benjamin
Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, said in response to Mr. Trump’s remarks
that Israel “will safeguard our vital interests under all circumstances.”
On
Wednesday, Israel’s military said that it had launched a new wave of strikes
targeting government infrastructure in Tehran and that it was intercepting
Iranian missiles launched toward Israel.
Aaron
Boxerman is a Times reporter covering Israel and Gaza. He is based in
Jerusalem.
Adam
Rasgon is a reporter for The Times in Jerusalem, covering Israeli and
Palestinian affairs.


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