Trump's Iran talks target broader Middle East reset, Abraham Accords expansion
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Vice President JD Vance met Iranian officials in Switzerland on Sunday, 22 June, as the Trump administration framed its ongoing diplomacy with Tehran as far more than a bid to end a four-month conflict — positioning the negotiations as a potential catalyst for a sweeping regional realignment across the Middle East. Senior administration figures argued the talks could prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon and expand the framework established by the Abraham Accords during President Donald Trump's first term.
What the Administration Is Saying
'What the president has asked us to do is turn over a new leaf to transform our relationship with the people of Iran,' Vance said, adding that if Iran's leadership abandoned regional instability and nuclear ambitions, the United States would be willing to 'fundamentally transform our relationship with that country.'
US Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz described the negotiations as an opportunity to establish a fundamentally different regional order. 'We need to give peace a chance,' Waltz said. 'Perhaps we can finally turn the page to a new Middle East, like President Trump did with the Abraham Accords his first term.' Waltz also pointed to deepening security cooperation among American regional partners, noting that Israel and the UAE were now working together militarily — a development he described as 'the next evolution of the Abraham Accords.'
Republican Push to Expand Abraham Accords
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham went further, linking the Iran negotiations directly to a broader regional strategy. 'We're going to expand the Abraham Accords in calendar year 2026,' Graham said in an interview on CBS. He predicted that Saudi Arabia would eventually join the normalisation framework, calling such an outcome 'the biggest change in 5,000 years in the Mideast.'
Graham also argued that a diplomatic settlement with Iran would box Tehran in regardless of outcome. 'If we get a deal, Iran will be in a box,' he said. 'If we don't get a deal, Iran will be in a box.'
Negotiating from Pressure
Administration officials have consistently argued that diplomacy backed by military pressure gives Washington greater leverage than previous rounds of talks with Tehran. Waltz said the United States was negotiating from a position of strength, citing what he described as 'a devastated Iranian economy' and 'a devastated Iranian military,' while keeping the focus firmly on nuclear non-proliferation.
Obstacles and Critics
The administration's vision faces significant headwinds. Critics have questioned whether the memorandum of understanding with Iran offers too many upfront concessions and whether Tehran can be trusted to honour future commitments. Some lawmakers have also raised concern that economic relief could allow Iran to rebuild military capabilities and bolster support for regional proxies.
Administration officials, however, maintain that the current negotiations represent only the opening stage of a larger diplomatic effort — not a final settlement. The Abraham Accords, brokered during Trump's first term, normalised relations between Israel and several Arab states including the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, and are widely regarded as one of the most consequential diplomatic shifts in the region in decades. Whether the Iran channel can deliver a comparable breakthrough remains, for now, an open question.