Sources confirm that the latest Iran nuclear negotiations are unlike any of its predecessors. This time, the stakes involve not just enriched uranium but an intricate web of weapons, money and ships that directly threaten UK security. Leaked documents and intelligence briefings reveal a deal that trades sanctions relief for a freeze on Iran’s ballistic missile programme and its naval operations in the Gulf.
But the devil is in the detail. Previous agreements left loopholes for Iran to funnel cash to proxies. This arrangement ostensibly blocks that, but sources inside the Foreign Office say the loopholes are wider than ever.
The UK’s security interests are at stake because Iran’s missile technology has advanced to strike range of European capitals. The ships in question are not just dhows smuggling arms to Yemen; they are fast-attack craft that could blockade the Strait of Hormuz. The money flows through obscure Gulf banks with London branches.
Uncover the trail and you find the same names tied to previous scandals. The government insists this deal is different. They say verifiable limits on Iran’s naval exercises and missile tests are ironclad.
But my sources say the verification mechanism is a farce. Inspectors will be limited to declared sites, while Iran’s underground bases stay off limits. The time has come to ask: why is the UK so eager to sign?
The answer, I suspect, lies in the oil contracts that await and the banking fees that follow. The cycle continues.











