At a glance
Critics and observers warn that the U.S.-Iran peace deal includes a 60-day window before renewed conflict could erupt if conditions break down. The narrow timeframe raises doubts about the agreement's durability.
Critics are flagging that the new U.S.-Iran peace deal apparently includes a 60-day window before conflict could resume if terms break down or aren't met. The timeframe is extraordinarily short for anything meant to be durable.
A 60-day window to prevent war isn't a peace agreement in any traditional sense—it's a pause with an expiration date. Either the terms are designed to be enforceable and verifiable within two months, or the agreement assumes hostilities will resume afterward. If the former, the deal is fragile. If the latter, it's not really a deal at all. The criticism isn't that Trump made a bad bargain; it's that what he's calling a peace agreement looks more like a ceasefire with a known end date.
Citation trail
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