The United States and Iran are quietly executing an unwritten diplomatic understanding to cap Tehran’s nuclear enrichment and unfreeze billions in sanctioned assets, even as Iranian naval forces continue to harass commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. This dual-track reality defines the modern geopolitical standoff between Washington and Tehran. Diplomats negotiate behind closed doors in the Middle East while fast boats swarm oil tankers in the Persian Gulf. The paradox is intentional. Both nations are seeking a mechanism to de-escalate the threat of a direct military conflict without appearing to capitulate to their respective domestic political bases.
The framework taking shape is not a formal treaty. It is a choreographed sequence of reciprocal steps. Washington secures a pause on Iran’s march toward weapons-grade uranium and the release of detained American citizens. Tehran secures access to frozen capital required to stabilize a collapsing domestic economy. Yet, the waters of the Middle East remain volatile. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) maintains a posture of calibrated aggression in the world’s most critical maritime chokepoint.
Understanding this fragile equilibrium requires looking past the daily headlines. The skirmishes at sea and the handshakes in secure diplomatic compounds are not contradictory events. They are two sides of the same strategic coin.
The Muscat Backchannel
Direct negotiations between the United States and Iran effectively ended following the collapse of efforts to revive the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). Washington and Tehran do not sit at the same table. Instead, they rely on intermediaries.
The Sultanate of Oman has historically served as the indispensable bridge between the West and the Islamic Republic. Under the direction of Sultan Haitham bin Tariq, Omani diplomats have facilitated a complex proximity dialogue. US Middle East coordinator Brett McGurk and Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani have traveled to Muscat for these indirect talks. They occupy separate rooms. Omani officials shuttle messages back and forth.
The objective in Muscat is not a grand bargain. The objective is crisis management.
The Biden administration recognizes that a return to the original JCPOA is politically unviable. The Iranian regime has advanced its nuclear infrastructure too far. The political appetite in Washington for a sweeping deal with Tehran is non-existent. Instead, the focus has shifted to an unwritten “mini-deal” or “understanding.”
The terms of this quiet arrangement are highly specific. Iran agrees to halt the accumulation of uranium enriched to 60 percent purity. Weapons-grade uranium requires 90 percent purity. By capping enrichment at 60 percent, Iran maintains its nuclear leverage but stops short of crossing the red line that would trigger Israeli or American military strikes against facilities like Natanz and Fordow.
In exchange, the United States turns a blind eye to a baseline level of Iranian oil exports, primarily to China. Furthermore, Washington facilitates the unfreezing of Iranian assets trapped in foreign banks due to US sanctions. The most prominent example involves roughly $6 billion in Iranian oil revenue held in South Korea, transferred to restricted accounts in Qatar for strictly humanitarian purchases.
The Theater of the Strait
While diplomats map out financial transfers in Oman, the physical reality of the conflict plays out in the Strait of Hormuz. This narrow waterway, separating the Arabian Peninsula from Iran, is the arterial vein of the global economy. Approximately 21 million barrels of oil transit the strait every day. That represents roughly 20 percent of global petroleum liquids consumption.
The US Navy’s Fifth Fleet, headquartered in Manama, Bahrain, patrols these waters to ensure freedom of navigation. Vice Admiral Brad Cooper and US Central Command (CENTCOM) maintain a constant vigil over the shipping lanes. They face an asymmetric adversary.
The IRGC Navy does not field a fleet of traditional destroyers or aircraft carriers. It relies on a swarm doctrine. Hundreds of heavily armed fast attack craft, coastal defense cruise missiles, and aerial drones form a layered anti-access/area denial (A2/AD) network.
Over the past two years, the IRGC has systematically harassed, boarded, and seized commercial vessels. In early 2023, Iranian forces seized the Marshall Islands-flagged oil tanker Advantage Sweet in the Gulf of Oman. Days later, they seized the Panama-flagged tanker Niovi as it transited the Strait of Hormuz. These actions trigger immediate alarms in global energy markets and force the Pentagon to deploy additional assets, including F-35 fighter jets and Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers like the USS Thomas Hudner, to the region.
The Logic of Calibrated Aggression
To an outside observer, seizing oil tankers while simultaneously negotiating for sanctions relief appears counterproductive. For the leadership in Tehran, it is entirely rational.
The Iranian government is not a monolith. The civilian government, led by President Ebrahim Raisi and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, handles the diplomatic portfolio. The IRGC, which answers directly to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, controls the military and regional proxy networks. The IRGC operates with its own institutional imperatives.
By escalating tensions in the Strait of Hormuz, the IRGC achieves several objectives. First, it demonstrates to domestic hardliners that the regime is not capitulating to Western pressure. Second, it reminds the Gulf Arab states, particularly Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, of Iran’s geographic dominance over their economic lifelines. Third, it provides the Iranian diplomatic corps with leverage. The implicit message delivered in Muscat is simple: Relieve the economic pressure, or the waters of the Gulf will become unnavigable.
The skirmishes are carefully calibrated. The IRGC targets commercial vessels, not US Navy warships. A direct attack on an American destroyer would invite a devastating kinetic response. Seizing a Greek-owned, Panama-flagged tanker creates a geopolitical headache without crossing the threshold into all-out war.
The Washington Calculus
The Biden administration navigates its own complex domestic landscape. The political toxicity surrounding Iran policy in Washington cannot be overstated.
Under the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act (INARA) of 2015, the US President is required to submit any formal agreement regarding Iran’s nuclear program to Congress for review. A formal treaty would face intense opposition from Republicans and hawkish Democrats on Capitol Hill. It would likely be blocked.
By pursuing an unwritten, informal understanding, the White House bypasses the INARA requirement. There is no document to sign. There is no treaty to ratify. There are only parallel, unilateral actions. Iran slows its centrifuges. The US Treasury Department issues quiet waivers for frozen funds. The arrangement relies entirely on mutual verification and temporary trust.
The strategy is a holding pattern. The administration’s primary goal is to keep the Iranian nuclear issue off the crisis agenda ahead of domestic election cycles. A war in the Middle East, or a sudden spike in global gasoline prices caused by a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, would be politically disastrous.
The Economic Reality in Tehran
For Iran, the shadow deal is a matter of regime survival. The Islamic Republic faces unprecedented internal and external pressures.
The “maximum pressure” sanctions campaign initiated by the Trump administration in 2018 severely crippled the Iranian economy. The national currency, the rial, has plummeted in value, trading at historic lows of over 500,000 to the US dollar on the unregulated market. Inflation routinely hovers above 50 percent. Basic goods, medicine, and food staples are increasingly out of reach for the average Iranian citizen.
This economic devastation compounded the widespread civil unrest sparked by the death of Mahsa Amini in the custody of the morality police in late 2022. The regime violently suppressed the protests, but the underlying grievances remain. The leadership in Tehran desperately needs a pressure valve.
Accessing the $6 billion frozen in South Korea, and potentially billions more held in Iraq, provides that valve. Even if the funds are strictly earmarked for humanitarian goods, money is fungible. Relieving the financial burden of importing food and medicine frees up domestic capital for other state priorities.
The Role of Regional Proxies
The unwritten understanding extends beyond the nuclear file and maritime shipping. It touches the complex web of Iranian proxy forces across the Middle East.
The United States maintains a military presence in Iraq and Syria, primarily to counter the remnants of the Islamic State. These US outposts have frequently been targeted by rocket and drone attacks launched by Iran-backed militia groups. Part of the quiet diplomacy involves Tehran reining in these militias.
When the backchannel talks in Oman make progress, the frequency of attacks on US bases in the Levant noticeably decreases. When talks stall, the rockets return. It is a violent form of Morse code. The IRGC uses its proxy network to dial the pressure up or down based on the status of the financial negotiations.
The International Atomic Energy Agency
Verification remains the fundamental flaw in any unwritten agreement. Without a formal treaty, the role of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) becomes both critical and precarious.
IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi has repeatedly warned about the diminishing visibility his inspectors have into Iran’s nuclear program. Tehran has disconnected surveillance cameras at key facilities and barred some of the agency’s most experienced inspectors. Under the terms of the shadow accord, Iran is expected to restore a baseline level of cooperation with the IAEA.
However, the lack of a binding legal framework means Tehran can revoke this access at any moment. The centrifuges at Natanz and Fordow are highly advanced. If Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei makes the political decision to break out and produce weapons-grade uranium, the timeline is measured in weeks, not months. The unwritten deal does not dismantle the nuclear infrastructure. It merely unplugs the machines temporarily.
The Fragile Equilibrium
The current state of US-Iran relations is a masterclass in brinkmanship. Both sides are operating at the absolute limit of their adversary’s tolerance.
The United States accepts a reality where Iran operates as a threshold nuclear state, possessing the knowledge and material to build a weapon, provided they do not take the final step. Iran accepts a reality where its economy remains heavily sanctioned, provided it receives enough financial relief to prevent a total domestic collapse.
The skirmishes in the Strait of Hormuz will not stop. The IRGC will continue to assert its presence in the Persian Gulf. The US Navy will continue to deploy destroyers and aircraft to deter them. The maritime friction is baked into the geopolitical baseline.
There is no grand resolution on the horizon. There is only the daily management of hostility. The backchannels remain open. The fast boats remain armed. The diplomats negotiate. The warships patrol. The centrifuges spin.
Equilibrium.
Next in the Series: The Architecture of Sanctions – How Global Financial Networks Isolate State Actors.




