In a startling pivot from the administration’s habitual hostility, Vice President J.D. Vance has emerged as the unlikely public face of a renewed nuclear framework with Iran, raising eyebrows in Whitehall and Tel Aviv.
While President Trump remains conspicuously silent—distracted by trade wars and legal battles—British intelligence sources report that Vance has held at least three undisclosed video conferences with Iranian officials, mediated by Omani diplomats. The talks, which began as backchannel soundings in February, have now crystallised into a draft accord that would cap Iran’s uranium enrichment at 3.67% in exchange for the unfreezing of $6 billion in oil revenues.
But the intelligence assessment from GCHQ and MI6 paints a darker picture: Iran sits just weeks away from a breakthrough to weapons-grade material, its centrifuges spinning faster than inspectors can count. The deal, if real, buys time. But critics warn it risks repeating the flaws of the 2015 JCPOA, which collapsed when Trump unilaterally withdrew in 2018.
The irony is acid. Vance, a man who once called the Iran deal ‘a catastrophic surrender’, now finds himself selling it to a sceptical Congress and an ally in Israel that has threatened pre-emptive strikes. National Security Adviser Michael Waltz confirmed the talks in a closed-door briefing, stating: ‘The Vice President is managing a narrow window.
If it closes, we must be prepared for a military option.’ Yet the administration’s own Department of Energy has secretly modelled the consequences of an Israeli strike scenario: a 40% spike in global oil prices, Iranian retaliation via proxies in Yemen and Syria, and a refugee crisis that would overwhelm Jordan. British intelligence, meanwhile, has detected unusual activity at Iran’s Fordow facility, buried deep inside a mountain.
Analysts believe that even if the deal is signed, Iran retains the technical know-how to race to a bomb within months. The deal’s structure echoes the ‘monitoring plus sanctions relief’ model, but lacks the snapback mechanisms that made the original JCPOA enforceable. ‘We are essentially trusting a regime that has lied about every aspect of its nuclear program’, said a former IAEA inspector.
‘This is not diplomacy. It is a bet.’ For Vance, the bet is personal.
The Ohio-born populist has courted anti-war libertarians and pro-Israel hawks simultaneously, a stance that has left him politically exposed. If the deal fails, his 2028 presidential ambitions collapse alongside it. If it succeeds, he may yet redefine his party’s foreign policy.
But the clock is ticking. British intelligence believes Iran could achieve a testable device by mid-August. The question is not whether Vance can sell the deal, but whether he can outrun the inevitable moment when a centrifuge fails and the world learns the truth.











