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STANDARD DIPLOMATIC UNVERIFIED

US seeks JCPOA modifications focusing on Iranian uranium stockpile fate

May 31, 2026 01:46 AM CT Washington D.C., United States nuclear program,JCPOA,diplomacy,uranium,US-Iran relations

Summary

US officials are pursuing modifications to the Iran nuclear deal with a specific focus on the disposition of Iran's uranium stockpile. Reports indicate Iran has agreed not to procure nuclear arms, though the US maintains a stance of seeking further changes to the agreement. This development represents a diplomatic effort to constrain Iran's nuclear capabilities, a core component of the broader Iran-Israel conflict theater.

Full Content

Separate report says US let Qatari tankers that paid Iran traverse Hormuz, and even escorted some; Trump: Deal coming 'slowly but surely,' Iran agreed not to procure nuclear arms The post Trump said seeking changes to Iran deal, focused on fate of uranium stockpile appeared first on The Times of ...

Sources (1)

T3 Times of Israel
50% reliable Link

Actor Responses

United States NEUTRAL

Seeking changes to the Iran deal and focusing on the fate of the uranium stockpile.

Iran NEUTRAL

Agreed not to procure nuclear arms as part of ongoing deal discussions.

Related Events (2)

→ PARALLEL TO 92% confidence
STANDARD Iran signals flexibility on potential US deal contingent on Trump administration terms

"Both events involve diplomatic negotiations regarding the JCPOA and US-Iran relations. Event 14 signals Iran's flexibility on deal terms, while the New Event details the US seeking specific modifications to that same deal, indicating they are concurrent diplomatic developments in the same negotiation track."

→ PARALLEL TO 91% confidence
STANDARD Iran signals readiness to amend potential US deal contingent on Trump administration terms

"Event 15 mirrors Event 14 in signaling Iran's readiness to amend a potential US deal. The New Event represents the US side of this same diplomatic interaction, seeking specific modifications to the agreement, making them parallel components of the ongoing negotiation process."