The odds of the current ceasefire collapsing into renewed, full-scale warfare this weekend are highly volatile, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu placing the probability at "more than fifty-fifty" while intensive, last-minute diplomatic mediation scrambles to prevent it.
Because the United States and Israel already launched an all-out war against Iran on February 28, 2026 (dubbed Operation Epic Fury), the current situation is not about triggering a new war, but rather whether the fragile, weeks-long ceasefire will completely break down.
The factors driving the high likelihood of renewed strikes—and the simultaneous efforts to stop them—include the following developments:
Factors Increasing the Odds of Immediate Escalation
The "Two-to-Three Day" Ultimatum: On May 19, U.S. President Donald Trump publicly warned that Iran had "two or three days" to accept a deal regarding its uranium stockpiles or face a resumption of devastating airstrikes. That deadline expires precisely over this weekend.
U.S. and Israeli Military Readiness: Military assets and strike plans remain fully prepared. Earlier in the week, Trump stated that U.S. aircraft were within one hour of launching a massive attack before he temporarily froze the order to allow brief diplomatic breathing room.
Israeli Cabinet Position: Israeli leadership strongly views a return to military action as nearly inevitable. While the U.S. has hesitated due to pressure from Gulf allies, Israel's security cabinet has held consecutive emergency meetings to prepare for a unilateral or joint resumption of hostilities.
Core Sticking Points: Negotiations are currently deadlocked over two severe issues: the U.S. demand that Iran surrender its uranium stockpiles, and Iran’s unilateral declaration of a "Persian Gulf Strait Authority" to permanently control transit through the Strait of Hormuz.
Factors Keeping the Ceasefire Intact
Intense Pakistan-Led Mediation: Officials from Pakistan are conducting "intense mediation activity" in Tehran, physically exchanging draft proposals between Washington and the Iranian government. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio noted there are "some good signs" of a potential breakthrough despite the harsh rhetoric.
Gulf State Deterrence: Rulers from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE heavily pressured President Trump to delay the strikes. These nations fear massive Iranian retaliatory strikes on their own infrastructure and have successfully delayed the U.S. timeline so far.
Threat of a Global War: The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) issued an explicit counter-warning this week, stating that if the U.S. or Israel resume attacks, Iran will extend the war "far beyond the region" with unpredictable, asymmetric strikes, heavily deterring immediate action.
Expected Timeline
A final decision to either sign a formal peace framework or resume heavy bombing is expected to land directly over this weekend as the temporary diplomatic extension expires. If mediation fails to resolve the nuclear file by the end of the deadline, a rapid escalation into renewed aerial and naval warfare is highly probable.
Iran is on the record that they will not take a first strike because a ten-point ceasefire is in effect but Israel is still agitating for war.
A temporary diplomatic extension is a non-binding or short-term agreement between two parties to prolong a specific diplomatic status, window of negotiation, or operational pause. It is used as a tool in international relations to buy time, maintain a baseline of stability, or prevent a breakdown in talks when a permanent or long-term agreement cannot be reached before a deadline.
Common Scenarios Where This Applies
Extending Ceasefires or Conflict Pauses: A country might issue a temporary extension on a pause in military action to give opposing leaders more time to present a unified peace proposal or continue back-channel negotiations.
Provisional Bilateral Agreements: Nations or entities that do not share full, official ties frequently use temporary extensions to keep functional channels open. For example, the Vatican and China previously signed a provisional agreement regarding the appointment of bishops and routinely rely on temporary diplomatic extensions while trying to iron out more sensitive, long-term political hurdles.
Visa and Staffing Accommodations: On an administrative level, a temporary diplomatic extension can refer to an authorized grace period allowing a diplomat, ambassador, or embassy official to remain in a host country past their scheduled tour of duty.
Key Characteristics
Maintains Pressure: It keeps a "dual-track" strategy active, allowing diplomatic talks to proceed while background military, economic, or political leverage remains fully in place.
Time-Bound: It does not represent a permanent treaty or final resolution; it simply sets a new, temporary expiration date.
Prevents Escalation: It signals to global markets and regional neighbors a temporary reduction in immediate short-term uncertainty.