US-Iran nuclear talks mediated by Pakistan remain stalled over Iran's uranium stockpile. Experts warn of escalation as both sides hold maximalist positions.
The clock is ticking again in the high-stakes diplomatic dance between the United States and Iran, and right at the center of it all sits something small enough to hold in your hand but massive enough to determine whether the Middle East steers toward peace or another round of conflict. We're talking about enriched uranium lots of itand nobody seems willing to move first.
As of May 2026, the Pakistan-mediated negotiations remain what experts politely call "intensive" and what everyone else recognizes as a genuine standoff. Both sides are dug in deep, waving Papers and making speeches, but when you cut through the diplomatic noise, the core dispute hasn't moved an inch. Iran refuses to shrink its uranium stockpile. The United States won't sign off on any deal that lets Tehran keep what it has. And somewhere in the middle, Pakistan's government is probably wondering if they bit off more than they can chew.
Here's where things stand right now, and why this stubborn impasse could define the region's trajectory for years to come.


