Negotiating Tehran: Iran and the Global Nuclear Debate
MTA
A documentary-style analysis of Iran's nuclear program, diplomacy, and international law
*Negotiating Tehran* provides a comprehensive documentary-style analysis of the decades-long crisis surrounding Iran’s nuclear program. It traces the program's evolution from its origins under the U.S.-backed "Atoms for Peace" initiative to the 1979 Revolution, the strategic pause during the Iran-Iraq War, and the subsequent rebuilding of an indigenous scientific base. A major turning point occurred in 2002 with the revelation of clandestine sites at Natanz and Arak, which shifted the international focus toward Iran's potential for uranium enrichment and plutonium production. The text meticulously examines the technical aspects of centrifuges and heavy water reactors, framed against the legal requirements of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and the International Atomic Energy Agency’s (IAEA) monitoring efforts.
The book details the diplomatic arc of the crisis, beginning with the early EU3 negotiations and escalating to the imposition of a massive "sanctions architecture" by the UN Security Council, the U.S., and the EU. This economic pressure campaign, combined with covert actions like the Stuxnet cyberattack and the internal shifts in Iranian domestic politics, eventually led to the 2013 opening facilitated by Omani backchannels. The culmination of these efforts was the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which established strict technical caps on Iran's nuclear activities and an unprecedented verification regime in exchange for sanctions relief. This section highlights the delicate trade-offs between Iranian sovereignty and international security requirements.
The latter portion of the book focuses on the unraveling of this diplomatic framework following the unilateral U.S. withdrawal in 2018. It explores the legal debates surrounding "snapback" sanctions, Iran's phased reduction of its own commitments, and the subsequent "maximum pressure" campaign. The narrative concludes by examining the Vienna Talks and the challenges of sequencing a return to compliance, while also addressing related security dilemmas such as Iran's ballistic missile and drone programs. Ultimately, the work serves as a case study in global governance, illustrating the persistent friction between non-proliferation norms and great-power politics in an increasingly complex geopolitical landscape.
This book is suited for policymakers, international relations scholars, legal experts, and technical professionals seeking a detailed, source‑based understanding of Iran’s nuclear program and its global implications. It will also benefit journalists, graduate students, and practitioners in nonproliferation, diplomacy, and security who need a clear yet comprehensive reference to the historical, technical, and legal dimensions of the Tehran negotiations.
March 15, 2026
English
47,660 words
3 hours 20 minutes
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