A US-Iran Deal Is Ready. So Why Is Trump Still Waiting?
Reports say a nuclear deal between the US and Iran is essentially done. But Trump has not signed it yet and nobody quite knows why. Oil prices and the entire Middle East are watching and waiting.

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Something strange is happening in Washington right now.
Multiple reports say a deal between the United States and Iran over Iran's nuclear programme is essentially finished. Negotiators on both sides have apparently agreed on the core terms. The text is ready.
And yet Donald Trump has not announced it. Has not signed it. Has not said much about it at all.
That silence is the story.
Deals like this do not stay quiet for long. Every hour it sits unsigned, something can go wrong — a hardliner in Tehran pushes back, a senator in Washington threatens a vote, oil markets move on a rumour. The window for these agreements is always smaller than it looks.
What we know is this. Since the US-led strikes on Iranian military positions earlier this year, both sides have had quiet backchannel conversations. The economic pressure on Iran from sanctions has been severe. And Trump, whatever else he is, has shown he is willing to deal with countries his predecessors kept at arm's length.
For oil-importing countries like Nepal, this matters more than it might seem. If a deal is signed and Iranian oil returns to global markets in significant volumes, fuel prices could drop. That is real money for real people — lower transport costs, cheaper goods, less strain on Nepal's foreign exchange reserves.
But first someone has to actually sign the paper.
As of today, they have not. The world is watching and waiting. And nobody seems to know what Trump is thinking.
