The United Kingdom has issued a stark warning about the danger of nuclear proliferation as Senator J.D. Vance emerges as the key negotiator in what is being called the Trump administration’s new Iran deal. In a shift that has unsettled diplomats and union leaders alike, Vance has taken the lead on talks that could see sanctions relief for Tehran in exchange for curbs on its nuclear programme. But critics say the deal lacks the tough safeguards of the 2015 agreement, and that the real cost will be borne by working families already squeezed by rising prices.
Downing Street said yesterday that any agreement must be verifiable and enforceable, or risk sparking a regional arms race. A Foreign Office spokesperson told reporters: “We share our American allies’ goal of preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. But we must be clear: a weak deal is worse than no deal. The consequences of failure will be felt not just in the Middle East, but in the price of oil and gas in every British home.”
For those of us who follow the real economy, the link between foreign policy and the kitchen table is clear. When oil prices spike, so does the cost of petrol, heating, and food transport. Wages, already stagnant after a decade of austerity, cannot keep pace. And while politicians in Washington and London talk about strategic stability, it is the worker on the shop floor, the nurse on the ward, the pensioner in a cold flat who pays the price.
Senator Vance, a former tech venture capitalist turned populist firebrand, has been described as the deal’s “new face”. He has dismissed concerns about Iran’s long-range missile programme and support for proxies, arguing that engagement is better than isolation. But unions and peace groups in Britain are deeply sceptical. “This isn’t about diplomacy. It’s about big oil and arms dealers making a profit while our communities are left to shoulder the risk,” said a spokesperson for the Trades Union Congress.
The shadow of Donald Trump looms large. It was Trump who pulled out of the original deal in 2018, calling it “the worst deal ever” and imposing crippling sanctions. Now, with Vance at the helm, the same administration looks set to negotiate a new version. The irony is not lost on observers. “They are negotiating with the same regime they once called a state sponsor of terror,” said a former UK ambassador to the UN. “It makes a mockery of the idea that there is a consistent policy.”
Meanwhile, the regional impact is already being felt. Israel has signalled it will not be bound by any new agreement, and Saudi Arabia has begun its own nuclear enrichment programme. The risk of a cascade of nuclear states in the Middle East is higher than at any time in decades. For Britain, a permanent member of the UN Security Council, the responsibility is clear. But with the government distracted by domestic crises and a cost-of-living emergency, there are fears that the nuclear issue will slip down the agenda.
On the streets of Manchester, where I grew up, people are watching the headlines with a mixture of anger and resignation. “We can’t afford another war in the Middle East,” said a shop steward at a local engineering plant. “And we can’t afford another deal that puts profits before people.” The government must listen. The price of peace should not be borne by the working class.








