In the tense theatre of international diplomacy, the difference between presidents is not merely a matter of policy but of human consequence. When Donald Trump abandoned the Obama-era nuclear deal with Iran in 2018, he wasn't just shredding a piece of paper. He was rewriting the entire script of how the West engages with a nation of 80 million people. And now, with tensions flaring once again, the question is not just about geopolitics, but about the ordinary lives caught in the crossfire.
Let's step back for a moment. Under Barack Obama, the approach was engagement. The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) was a carefully choreographed dance of sanctions relief in exchange for nuclear concessions. It was, as the former president put it, a 'diplomatic pathway' built on trust and verification. The impact on the street in Tehran? Cautious optimism. People began to hope for an end to isolation, for foreign investment, for easier travel and trade. There were new cars on the road, more imported goods on shelves, and a palpable sense that the oppressive hum of international sanctions might finally fade.
Enter Trump. His strategy was the antithesis: maximum pressure. Withdraw from the deal. Reimpose crippling sanctions. Target Iran's oil exports and banking system with a precision that seemed designed to strangle the economy. The goal was to force Iran back to the table, this time on American terms. But what does 'maximum pressure' look like from the vantage point of a family in Isfahan or a shopkeeper in Shiraz? It looks like queues for subsidised bread. It looks like a currency in freefall, the rial losing more than 90 percent of its value. It looks like inflation that makes essentials a luxury and medicine a privilege. The human cost has been staggering: reports from humanitarian groups describe millions pushed into poverty, a struggling healthcare system, and a generation of young Iranians with limited prospects.
So why does this matter now? Because this week, the echoes of that policy shift are reverberating through the corridors of power in Vienna, in Washington, and in the bazaars of Tehran. The current administration, under Joe Biden, has tried to re-enter the nuclear deal, but the landscape has changed. Trump's departure from the accord gave Iran a sense of betrayal that has hardened its negotiating stance. Meanwhile, the 'maximum pressure' campaign, while weakening Iran's economy, did not dismantle its nuclear programme. In fact, it accelerated it. Iran is now closer than ever to weapons-grade enrichment, and its proxies in the region have become more emboldened.
The cultural shift is real. Inside Iran, the narrative of defiance has grown. The regime used Trump's withdrawal as a rallying cry, painting the United States as an untrustworthy bully. For many ordinary Iranians, the lesson was harsh: engagement got them crushed by US sanctions, so what was the point? The moderate voices, those who had championed the deal, were marginalised. Hardliners took control of parliament and the presidency. The very social and civic space that had been opening up under the relative calm of the JCPOA was replaced by a clampdown on dissent and a return to revolutionary rhetoric.
For the American public, this is not just a foreign policy debate. It is a lesson in how quickly human lives can be reshaped by the signature at the bottom of a presidential memorandum. The Obama approach was about incremental change, about building a ladder for Iran to climb towards normalisation. The Trump approach was about breaking the ladder entirely. And the result? A nation that has been radicalised by economic pain, a nuclear clock that has been sped up, and a diplomatic path that is now littered with suspicion.
Class dynamics play a part too. The wealthy in Iran have always found ways to shield their assets. It is the middle class and the working poor who bear the brunt of sanctions. They are the ones who can no longer afford imported goods, whose savings evaporate, whose children's futures darken. The sense of betrayal is not just political; it is deeply personal.
As the discussions resume, we must remember that the people in the middle of this geopolitical chess game are not pawns but persons. Trump's strategy, for all its bluster, ultimately failed to achieve its stated goal of a 'better deal'. Instead, it left a bitter legacy of economic devastation and a more dangerous Iran. And for the families in Tehran, in Mashhad, in the villages of the Zagros mountains, that legacy is not an abstract concept. It is the price they pay for a strategy that aimed to break a nation but ended by breaking lives.
In the end, what Trump did differently was not just a matter of policy. It was a matter of humanity. And that is why it matters now more than ever.








