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7MAY

Araghchi reopens the talks Tehran had suspended

3 min read
10:13UTC

Iran's foreign minister rang six capitals on 2 and 3 June to reopen the talks his own Security Council had suspended on Monday, denying the IRGC line that messages with Washington had stopped.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Araghchi rang six capitals to reopen talks his own Security Council had just suspended.

Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araghchi spent 2 and 3 June pulling the talks suspension back open. He publicly denied a claim by Tasnim, the IRGC-linked news agency, that messages with Washington had stopped, calling it "speculation" against an exchange he said was "ongoing" 1. Then he worked the phones: Pakistan's foreign minister Ishaq Dar and army chief Asim Munir, then Qatar, Turkey, France and Belgium 2.

The SNSC (Iran's Supreme National Security Council) had suspended all mediated talks at 09:56 on Monday 1 June, citing Israel's Lebanon strikes . By Wednesday the Foreign Ministry was acting as though that order did not bind it. Two arms of the same state said opposite things in public on the same days: the IRGC mouthpiece declared the channel dead, the civilian ministry rang the mediators to prove it alive.

Araghchi used the Lebanon ceasefire as his way back in, reopening contact with Islamabad and Doha first, the capitals that carry messages to Washington. The mediators now have to guess which voice binds Tehran, the IRGC suspension or the ministry that reopened the line. Araghchi resolved the split not with a statement but with a deed, dialling the phones the Tasnim line had declared silent.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran's government does not speak with one voice. There is the elected civilian government, led by Foreign Minister Araghchi, whose job is to handle diplomacy. Then there is the Supreme National Security Council, which answers to the Supreme Leader and includes the Revolutionary Guard (IRGC). When the IRGC-linked news agency Tasnim said Iran had stopped answering US messages, and Araghchi simultaneously called six foreign counterparts to reopen diplomacy, these were two different parts of the Iranian government sending opposite signals at the same time. Araghchi called Pakistan's army chief Asim Munir alongside Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar. Pakistan holds the only active military-to-military back-channel between Iran and the US in 2026. By phoning both the civilian and military Pakistani contacts, Araghchi was trying to keep both tracks open simultaneously.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's constitution gives the Supreme Leader final authority over foreign and security policy, but in practice the IRGC controls operational communications and the Foreign Ministry controls formal diplomatic channels. The SNSC, chaired by the Supreme Leader's office, sits above both. The result is a tripartite structure in which each tier can send contradictory signals without any single tier being fully in charge.

The specific trigger for the 1 June suspension was the Lebanon front: the SNSC cited Israeli strikes in Lebanon as a ceasefire breach. Araghchi used the Lebanon ceasefire as his re-entry point precisely because it gave him a pretext that did not require contradicting the SNSC's stated reason for suspending. He was not reopening Iran-US nuclear talks; he was reopening the Lebanon-linked mediation channels, which the SNSC had suspended for a reason that Araghchi could claim was resolving.

Escalation

The Araghchi calls represent de-escalation relative to the SNSC suspension of 1 June. The reopening of mediated channels reduces the risk of a full diplomatic breakdown, but the underlying cause of the suspension (the Lebanon front) remained unchanged on 2 and 3 June as the IDF advanced toward the Zaharani.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Washington will need to determine which Iranian signal to respond to: Araghchi's calls indicate talks are live, but the SNSC suspension has not been formally rescinded, creating legal ambiguity about Iran's official negotiating posture.

  • Risk

    If the IRGC interprets Araghchi's outreach as unsanctioned, a further SNSC intervention (more explicit than the 1 June suspension) could publicly humiliate the Foreign Ministry and kill civilian diplomacy entirely.

First Reported In

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