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What exactly makes you think this? Outside of giving Iran more money and resources to arm their proxies and crackdown on protests, the most common criticism of the JCPOA was that it lacked any enforcement mechanism or requirement to dismantle existing facilities/capabilities.
Also the agreement was not that the Islamic Republic of Iran would not develop nuclear weapons, the agreement was that they would pause their pursuit of nuclear weapons for 10 years. That was in 2015 and it is currently 2026.
The compliance mechanism was the threat of snapback sanctions, which had been severe enough to get them to come to the table to negotiate in the first place.
That's not correct. Iran had about 19,000 centrifuges before the deal then the deal capped them at about 5000.
This also isn't correct. Under the NPT they weren't allowed to have get a bomb ever. What the JCPOA focused on was enhanced monitoring to make sure that was the case for the first 1-2 decades. The entire plan didn't go defunct after 10 years, there were other nuclear surveillance bits that had 15 and 20 year sunsets. Beyond that, Iran was required to sign the Additional Protocol of the NPT which would have given some amount of additional long-term monitoring, although it would have looked closer to "regular country with civilian nuclear plants" like Japan rather than the highly invasive monitoring of the JCPOA.
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