
Lose All Battles, Win All Wars with Word Play: Iran 101A
When Western diplomats finally emerge from marathon negotiation sessions with Iran, exhausted but triumphant, they often believe they’ve secured a binding agreement. They haven’t. What they’ve actually signed is the opening move in an entirely different game—one where the rules are fluid, the language is deliberately vague, and patience isn’t just a virtue, it’s a weapon. Iranian negotiators are widely regarded by international relations experts as some of the most skilled, patient, and precise dealmakers in the world. But their genius isn’t in what they agree to. It’s in how they’ve already planned to reinterpret it. Rather than viewing an agreement as a final, static contract, Tehran treats every signed document as a fluid baseline for the next phase of competition. This approach is deeply rooted in a blend of traditional bazaar-style haggling, historical grievances, and specific cultural and religious concepts that most Western negotiators barely understand—and certainly don’t anticipate. The result? Iran consistently “loses” individual negotiating battles—and often the battlefield ones too—while positioning itself to win the longer war. Here’s how they do it.
Lose All Battles, Win All Wars with Word Play: Iran 101A
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