The Trump administration's memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the Islamic Republic of Iran is a framework, not a final deal, and the difference between the two is the difference between a generational victory and a generational mistake. The MOU will be judged on a single question. Does the final agreement verifiably dismantle Iran's nuclear program and remove its enriched uranium stockpile from the regime’s hands, or does it manage their path to a bomb the way the JCPOA did? There is no third option. Anything in between is the 2015 deal on different letterhead, and a mismanagement of the leverage the Trump administration has gained in this war. President Trump's instinct that the strategic imperative is nonproliferation is correct. The Islamic Republic is weaker today than at any point since 1979. Maximum pressure was working. The internal pressure was at a boiling point. The regime came to the table because it had to, not because it wanted to, and that is the leverage the U.S. is in danger of trading away.TRUMP NUCLEAR TALKS FACE DEFINING QUESTION: WHAT HAPPENS TO IRAN’S URANIUM STOCKPILE?Is there even a deal that will be upheld by a duplicitous regime? Perhaps not, but at the very least, a final agreement that locks in dismantlement, stages sanctions relief against demonstrated compliance, and preserves every snapback tool would be more prudent. A repeat of the JCPOA's structure, money up front and a managed path to enrichment, would be the most expensive diplomatic concession in modern memory. The JCPOA had two fatal flaws, and both are avoidable.The first was the cash transfer. Between unfrozen assets and direct payments, the Islamic Republic received roughly $100 billion in spendable resources within the first phase of the agreement. That money did not go to schools or hospitals. It went to the IRGC, to Hezbollah, to the Houthis, to Hamas, to the proxy network that has defined the regional security environment for the last decade. Front-loaded sanctions relief does not inspire good behavior. It pays for the terror proxies. The second was the architecture of the sunset clauses. The 2015 agreement did not stop the Iran nuclear program. It only managed their path to the bomb. By 2030, on paper, every meaningful restriction lifts. The regime understood the deal not as a containment regime but as a delay regime, and it used the delay to advance enrichment, expand missile capacity, and entrench the very infrastructure the agreement was supposed to constrain. The final MOU agreement must invert that logic. Restrictions must be permanent and verification must be intrusive. Enrichment capacity must be physically removed, not paused.There is a third condition that does not get enough attention in Washington and is non-negotiable in Tehran. There needs to be a credible threat of consequence at the moment of noncompliance. The Islamic Republic honors agreements only when the cost of violation exceeds the benefit. That equation has to be visible to the regime at the signing table and at every subsequent inspection. That means kinetic options remain on the table. Economic warfare tools remain ready. Political pressure escalates automatically. Snapback cannot be procedural. It must be automatic and it must bite.What is this agreement for? If it is to prevent an Iranian nuclear weapon, then dismantlement and surrender of enriched uranium are the only acceptable terms. If it is to stabilize the Strait of Hormuz or to reduce regional friction, those are secondary objectives that should be pursued through other instruments. Conflating nonproliferation with regional diplomacy is what produced the JCPOA. The 2015 deal tried to do too many things and ended up doing none of them.The Iranian people are not an afterthought in this negotiation. They are a constituency. The regime they live under has executed an estimated 42,000 of them in the January protests alone. Two more political prisoners were hanged since the MOU was announced. Any agreement should factor in the moral and strategic reality of a regime that murders its own citizens on an industrial scale.This is the moment for the administration to refuse a bad deal and to define a good one. Verifiable dismantlement. Permanent restrictions. Staged sanctions relief tied to sustained compliance. Snapback with teeth. Enriched uranium out of regime hands. The regime came to the table because pressure worked. The president should remember why he had leverage in the first place, and use it.