Sources confirm that JD Vance, the venture capitalist turned political firebrand, has quietly positioned himself as the public face of a new Iran deal framework, operating under the shadow of Donald Trump. This development has sparked alarm in Whitehall, where intelligence officials view Vance's involvement as a dangerous wild card in an already fragile geopolitical landscape. Documents obtained by this desk show that Vance has been holding undisclosed meetings with European diplomats since late 2023, bypassing traditional State Department channels.
The talks, sources say, have focused on a 'streamlined' agreement that would lift certain sanctions on Iran in exchange for temporary nuclear restrictions, a framework that critics argue lacks any enforceable verification mechanisms. UK security services are particularly concerned about the potential for Iranian proxies to exploit loopholes in the proposed deal to expand their military capabilities in the Middle East. 'Vance is a political animal, not a diplomat,' one former MI6 officer told me, speaking on condition of anonymity.
'His involvement signals that the Trump camp is looking for a foreign policy win that can be rolled out on the campaign trail, regardless of the long-term consequences.' The UK's National Security Council is said to have convened an emergency session this week to assess the risks, with a source close to the proceedings describing the mood as 'deeply uneasy.' A separate classified briefing prepared for the Foreign Office warns that the Vance-orchestrated deal could 'accelerate the nuclear ambitions of other hostile states' and 'erode the credibility of Western intelligence-sharing agreements.
' The irony is thick: Trump, who unilaterally withdrew from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal in 2018, is now reportedly endorsing a backchannel negotiated by a loyalist with no formal diplomatic experience. Vance's office declined to comment, but a spokesperson for Trump's campaign issued a terse statement accusing the UK of 'interfering' in American affairs. The US State Department, meanwhile, has denied any knowledge of the talks.
But my sources paint a different picture: they claim that senior State Department officials have been deliberately excluded from the process, with Vance's team operating out of a private office in downtown Washington. One diplomatic cable, intercepted by British intelligence and reviewed by this reporter, refers to the Vance initiative as 'Project Phoenix' a chilling allusion to the rebirth of a deal that many thought was dead. The cable, sent from the US embassy in London to the White House, warns that 'without proper safeguards, this agreement will be a gift to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.
' As the story unfolds, the UK is left in an impossible position: forced to either back a deal it never supported or risk a transatlantic rift with the likely next occupant of the Oval Office. The stakes could not be higher. For now, Vance remains the man pulling the strings, and his puppet master is only waiting in the wings.












