Planned U.S.-Iran talks in Switzerland were put on hold after Vice President JD Vance delayed a trip to help open technical negotiations, a setback for a newly signed agreement meant to move the countries toward a broader settlement and reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
The delay comes at a fragile moment: the agreement signed this week by President Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian was described as an initial step, not a final peace deal. It was intended to start a 60-day negotiating period on wider disputes, including Iran’s nuclear program, while easing immediate pressure on shipping and fighting tied to the war.
Separately, a newly revealed Department of Homeland Security document outlines plans to give some local police working on DHS’s behalf access to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facial recognition tool, NPR reported. The mobile app, called the ICE Task Force Module, would let officers scan people’s faces in the field and compare them against more than 250 million government records.
Talks delayed after Vance postpones Switzerland trip
The White House said late Thursday that Vance would not travel to Switzerland as planned, saying the logistics of the negotiations had not been “simple or predictable” and that plans for the upcoming technical talks had not been finalized. Switzerland’s foreign ministry later said the talks involving the U.S., Iran, Qatar and Pakistan had been postponed, while preparatory work at the Burgenstock resort was continuing.
The status of the meeting has been described differently across reports: NPR characterized the Switzerland talks as canceled, while the White House and Swiss officials described the immediate round as postponed and said they hoped technical talks would begin as soon as possible. No new date was announced in the captured reports.
The talks were expected to focus on implementing the memorandum of understanding signed earlier in the week and on beginning discussions over longer-term issues. Reported terms include reopening the Strait of Hormuz, a pledge that Iran will never have a nuclear weapon, a reconstruction plan for Iran and the termination of U.S. sanctions on Iran. U.S. Central Command announced that American forces had lifted a blockade on ships entering and leaving Iranian ports and coastal areas, one of the ceasefire conditions described by NPR.
Lebanon fighting strains the agreement
The delay followed intensified fighting in southern Lebanon, where the agreement was supposed to help halt military operations. Israel’s military said it had targeted Hezbollah-linked infrastructure and individuals, and said four Israeli soldiers were killed. Lebanese casualty figures differed in the available reports: Lebanon’s state-run news agency reported at least 16 people killed in Israeli airstrikes, according to CBS News, while the BBC cited Lebanon’s health ministry saying at least 18 people were killed and 33 injured.
The fighting has exposed a central weakness in the emerging deal. President Trump said he expected a complete ceasefire “on all fronts,” including between Israel and Hezbollah, but Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said Israeli forces will remain in southern Lebanon as long as Israel’s security needs require it. Members of Netanyahu’s cabinet have criticized the agreement, and Israel’s far-right national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, wrote that Israel’s security was “not up for bargaining.”
Iran’s position also remains uncertain. CBS News reported that Iran’s supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, said he allowed Pezeshkian to sign the deal despite holding a different view, and warned that Iran would not accept excessive U.S. demands. NPR reported that Iran’s foreign ministry said the signing ceremony was off, while the White House said plans for technical talks had not yet been finalized.
DHS facial recognition plan draws new attention
The DHS development is separate from the Iran talks but raises its own policy questions. NPR reported that the ICE Task Force Module would allow local police who are working on DHS’s behalf to scan the faces of people they stop in their communities. The app would compare those images with records including State Department visa files and the Traveler Verification Service.
After a scan, the app would direct the officer either to “not detain or arrest” the person or to use a reference code to obtain additional information from ICE, according to NPR’s description of the document. The source material does not include a DHS public rollout date or identify which local agencies would receive access.
Together, the two developments underscore separate but consequential decisions facing the Trump administration: whether a fragile opening with Iran can survive pressure from fighting in Lebanon, and how far federal immigration enforcement tools will extend into local policing.
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