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Trump's team holds an overnight meeting: Iran turns negotiations into 'installment payments,' should the U.S. swipe the card?
If this negotiation is compared to shopping, Iran has clearly introduced a new model: installment payments.
A three-phase plan, seemingly gentle, is actually very well designed. First reduce conflict, then gradually advance, and finally establish a long-term mechanism. This structure's biggest advantage is—reducing the difficulty for the other side to refuse.
Trump's team holds an overnight meeting, actually debating a question:
"Should we pay the first installment first?"
Because once entering the first phase, it means both sides start to build a certain level of trust. And trust, in international politics, is more valuable than gold.
But Iran's cleverness lies in using the Strait of Hormuz as the "down payment condition." This is equivalent to saying:
"Do you want installment payments? First solve the most expensive part."
This move is brilliant because it directly locks onto core interests.
From the U.S. perspective, this is a bit like being told by a salesperson while shopping: "This is the most important, you buy this first."
You might think: Is this a trick?
So, the focus of the meeting isn't whether to negotiate, but:
Is this a carefully designed "rhythm trap"?
Even more interesting is that this three-phase structure can create an illusion of "progress" in international opinion. Even if actual progress is slow, the outside world will feel things are improving.
For Iran, this is a plus.
And for Trump's team, it's a dilemma:
Should they prioritize short-term stability or long-term dominance?
The final summary:
This isn't just simple negotiation, but a combination of "psychological + rhythm" tactics. #加密市场小幅下跌