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Trump’s Iran Proposal Has Echoes of Half-Finished Gaza Deal

The negotiations between the United States and Iran to end their war are following President Trump’s familiar playbook for resolving a Middle East crisis: agree to a cease-fire and deal with the toughest problems later.

Analysts say the approach has had mixed results in the Gaza Strip, where Mr. Trump brokered a truce last year between Israel and Hamas, the Iranian-backed militant group. Plans for a so-called Phase 2 agreement — under which Hamas was to lay down its arms and Israel would allow Gaza to be rebuilt after a devastating war — have stalled. A similar approach in U.S. talks with Iran would run the same risks.

Officials say the Trump administration’s latest proposal focuses on ending Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, the Persian Gulf waterway that is a key transit route for oil and gas shipments. Iran imposed a near blockade on the strait after the United States and Israel attacked the country in late February, causing energy prices to soar and increasing pressure on Mr. Trump at home as voters endured rising costs.

Discussions to resolve some of the president’s stated goals for launching the war — far more contentious issues like ending Iran’s nuclear program, and dealing with its missile stockpiles and its support for militia groups across the Middle Eastwould be pushed off for later.

Taking a phased approach to complicated negotiations can be beneficial, said Michael Koplow, the chief policy officer at the Israel Policy Forum, a New York-based research group. But in Mr. Trump’s case, it could also be as a way for the president to claim victory while leaving the core issues unsolved, he added.

Iran’s leaders have also been emboldened by the military conflict, making them less likely to compromise in future talks, analysts say.

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