Word from diplomats and nearby regions says Washington and Tehran might pause again – this time sixty days longer – on their current truce, yet neither side has formally announced such a deal.
Supposedly, extra days are being considered just to stretch out talks on bigger matters – things like sea safety, local tensions, penalties, plus what Tehran’s doing with its atomic work. People who know about the meetings mention everything feels shaky right now, subject to shifts even before officials speak up.
Word from people close to the talks says this is more of a starting point than something signed and sealed. Still, experts say hurdles inside each country might slow things down or even stop progress later on. Though hopes are there, politics at home often get in the way when deals like this come up.
A green light might ease Gulf tensions fast, calming worries about more shocks to world oil flows. Still, watchers warn core rifts between the nations haven’t gone away – so truce efforts may stay shaky.