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US–Iran Nuclear Deal 2026: IAEA, Hormuz and JCPOA Explained for CLAT

CURRENT AFFAIRS | 7 MAY 2026

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After a decade of failed diplomacy, the United States and Iran appear on the verge of a historic agreement that could reshape the geopolitics of the Middle East and global energy markets. Negotiations led by US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner have produced a 14-point one-page MOU framework — a stripped-down, operationally focused document that differs markedly from the elaborate JCPOA architecture of 2015. At its core: Iran commits to a moratorium on uranium enrichment; the US commits to lifting sanctions and releasing approximately USD 50 billion in frozen Iranian assets; both sides ease restrictions on passage through the Strait of Hormuz; and Iran agrees to enhanced IAEA snap inspections, including the removal of highly enriched uranium (HEU) stockpiles.

The deal’s significance extends far beyond Iran. The Strait of Hormuz — a 33km-wide chokepoint between Iran and Oman — carries approximately 20% of global oil trade. When the US Navy paused its commercial vessel escorts through Hormuz upon announcement of “great progress” in talks, Brent crude oil prices fell about 3% — a real-time signal of how deeply energy markets are intertwined with this negotiation. For India, which imports approximately 85% of its crude oil and has a diaspora of about 9 million people in Gulf countries, the stakes are immediate and personal.

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The JCPOA precedent looms large over this MOU. Signed in 2015, the original deal brought Iran’s uranium enrichment down to 3.67% purity (far below weapons-grade threshold of ~90%), capped centrifuge numbers, and enabled IAEA inspectors to monitor Iran’s nuclear programme. Trump’s unilateral withdrawal in May 2018 led Iran to progressively exceed JCPOA limits — enriching uranium up to 60% purity and beyond. Whether this new MOU can succeed where JCPOA’s implementation ultimately collapsed is the central question.

⚖️ Constitutional & Legal Framework

  • IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency): UN specialised agency; HQ Vienna, Austria; est. 1957; DG Rafael Mariano Grossi (Argentina)
  • NPT (1968, entered force 1970): 191 parties; Art. III requires NNWS to accept IAEA safeguards; India NOT a signatory
  • JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, 2015): Iran + P5+1 (US,UK,France,Russia,China+Germany) + EU; US withdrew May 2018
  • UNSC Resolution 2231 (2015): Endorsed JCPOA; established “snapback” mechanism for automatic sanction restoration if Iran violates
  • Strait of Hormuz: 33km wide at narrowest; between Iran and Oman; ~20% of global oil trade; critical chokepoint
  • P5 = Permanent 5 UNSC members: US, UK, France, Russia, China (all nuclear weapon states under NPT)
  • India’s energy dependence: ~85% crude oil imported; 9 million diaspora in Gulf; directly affected by Hormuz disruptions
🎯 CLAT Angle — Why This Matters

CLAT GK and RC passages on nuclear treaties test two main areas: (1) the architecture of the NPT — who are the recognized nuclear weapon states, what are NNWS obligations under Art. III, and which major states have NOT signed the NPT; (2) the JCPOA’s history, including what it restricted, who signed it, when the US withdrew, and what the consequences were.

The IAEA is also tested in the context of international organisations: where it’s headquartered (Vienna, NOT Geneva — a common confusion with WHO/WTO), its current Director General (Rafael Grossi of Argentina), and its relationship with the UN (specialised agency, not a principal organ — unlike the UNSC or UNGA).

Key trap for CLAT: “India withdrew from the NPT” — FALSE. India NEVER joined the NPT. Along with Pakistan and Israel, India has consistently refused to sign the treaty, arguing it is discriminatory. North Korea, by contrast, DID join the NPT but withdrew in 2003 after its nuclear programme was discovered. These distinctions matter for RC inference questions.

📋 Key Facts at a Glance

MOU Framework 14-point one-page document; 30-day negotiation window for full agreement
Iran’s Commitments Enrichment moratorium + IAEA snap inspections + HEU removal
US Commitments Sanctions lifted + ~USD 50 billion frozen assets released
Strait of Hormuz 33km wide; Iran-Oman border; ~20% global oil trade; world’s key chokepoint
IAEA HQ Vienna, Austria; est. 1957; DG = Rafael Mariano Grossi (Argentina)
JCPOA (2015) Iran + P5+1 + EU; US withdrew unilaterally May 2018 under Trump
NPT Non-Signatories India, Pakistan, Israel (never joined); N. Korea (withdrew 2003)
UNSC Resolution 2231 Endorsed JCPOA; created snapback mechanism for automatic sanctions restoration
India’s Stake 85% crude oil imported; 9M diaspora in Gulf; vulnerable to Hormuz disruptions
🧠 Remember This
MNEMONIC: “JOINT” — the JCPOA framework
J = Joint — it took P5 + Germany + EU (P5+1 format)
O = Obama signed in 2015; Trump Ousted the US in 2018
I = Iran agreed to cap enrichment at 3.67% and limit centrifuges
N = NPT — Iran is a signatory; India is NOT
T = Trump 2.0 (2026) is now pursuing a new MOU / “JCPOA 2.0”

Memory hook: “JOINT deal = it needs everyone together. When the US left, the joint broke — Iran started smoking HEU beyond limits.”

Practice Quiz — 10 CLAT-Style Questions

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