A report by Axios describes an internal battle within the White House before the announcement of the U.S.-Iran agreement aimed at ending the conflict in the Middle East. The report also reveals that CIA Director John Ratcliffe briefed U.S. President Donald Trump and senior officials on intelligence findings that raised serious doubts about Iran’s willingness to make the nuclear concessions Washington seeks in a final agreement.
According to the report, Ratcliffe was not the only skeptic. Concerns about the memorandum of understanding with Tehran were also reportedly voiced by Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.
On the other side were Vice President J. D. Vance and Trump’s envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, according to Axios sources.
The briefing took place during a series of high-level meetings in the hours before the agreement was announced. Trump and his team reviewed intelligence gathered by several U.S. agencies indicating that the way Iranian officials discussed the deal privately was inconsistent with what they were telling mediators and U.S. negotiators.
Based on this intelligence, Ratcliffe and Rubio reportedly questioned whether Iran would actually implement the nuclear measures sought by Washington.
“The intelligence reflects that Iranian intentions do not align with their commitments under the agreement,” one source told Axios.
A White House official responded that President Trump hears all viewpoints before making decisions, but emphasized that he alone makes the final call.
The official added that the memorandum meets all of the administration’s long-standing red lines by ensuring that Iran:
- Cannot acquire nuclear weapons,
- Cannot retain highly enriched uranium,
- Cannot hold the global energy supply hostage.
The official also stressed that Trump would only approve a final agreement if it is a “good deal.”
“The Iranians Will Get More”
According to Axios, the full text of the initial 14-point agreement has not yet been released. However, a source familiar with the document claimed that Iran would receive more benefits than concessions under the memorandum—unless it ultimately signs a nuclear agreement that satisfies U.S. objectives.
The source said the memorandum commits both sides to:
- Resolving the issue of Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium.
- Discussing future uranium enrichment and other mutually agreed nuclear matters within a framework to be finalized later.
The text reportedly allows Iran to maintain the current status of its nuclear program while negotiations continue.
In return:
- The United States would refrain from imposing new sanctions.
- The U.S. would not deploy additional military forces to the region.
If a final nuclear agreement is reached, the U.S. would, within 30 days:
- Withdraw forces mobilized during the conflict.
- Lift all sanctions on Iran according to an agreed timetable.
A Decision Point Within Weeks
A senior U.S. official said Washington expects to know within two to three weeks whether Iran is serious about making the required nuclear concessions.
If Tehran is not willing to move forward, the process could collapse before Iran gains significant benefits from the arrangement.
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