Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
2JUN

Araghchi flies to BRICS Delhi 14-15 May

3 min read
09:04UTC

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi travels to New Delhi on 14-15 May for the BRICS foreign ministers meeting with Russia's Sergey Lavrov and India's Subrahmanyam Jaishankar. Spokesman Ismail Baghaei set ending the war and lifting the Hormuz blockade as 'prerequisites' to nuclear talks.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Araghchi meets Lavrov and Jaishankar at BRICS Delhi on 14-15 May, the same days Trump sees Xi.

Abbas Araghchi, Iran's Foreign Minister, travels to New Delhi on 14-15 May 2026 for the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa bloc) foreign ministers meeting, chaired by India and including Russia's Sergey Lavrov and India's Subrahmanyam Jaishankar 1. The trip runs on the same two days Donald Trump sits across from Xi Jinping in Beijing. Iran's top diplomat will be in the next room with the two BRICS counterparts most able to underwrite a non-Western verification mechanism for Hormuz on the same days the US tries to convert China into a pressure lever.

Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman Ismail Baghaei set the precondition on 12 May: ending the war and lifting the Hormuz blockade are "prerequisites" to any resumption of nuclear talks 2. Araghchi has held four high-level calls with Jaishankar since the war began on 28 February. India's own interests (stable crude supply, the safety of Indian crews on Iranian-routed tankers, and the Indian firms named in earlier OFAC designations) make Delhi a less-than-reliable conduit for US pressure. The pivot to the multilateral track followed Iran's silence after the 9 May deadline ; the bilateral channel held no fresh text, so Araghchi went looking for one elsewhere.

BRICS foreign ministers meetings have historically produced communiques on third-country conflicts that the West then negotiates against in subsequent UN Security Council drafts. The 2022 Samarkand communique on Ukraine was the template: agreed BRICS language constrained subsequent G7 positions because the alternative was a public divergence the G20 could not paper over. Delhi 14-15 May is now in that template's slot. The IAEA, locked out of Iran since the Majlis suspended all cooperation in April, would be required for any Western verification mechanism Iran has now pre-conditioned on war-end. The parallel-summits architecture is the product of 75 days during which neither side has signed anything; each is now building the multilateral backing it will need if a written deal ever has to converge.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

While Trump was meeting China's president in Beijing, Iran's top diplomat was in a different room in a different city: New Delhi. He was attending a meeting of the BRICS group of countries. BRICS is a bloc of major non-Western economies including Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi met his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov and India's External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar on 14-15 May. Iran's aim was to build non-Western diplomatic support for its position: that any nuclear talks must wait until the war ends and the Hormuz blockade is lifted. If the BRICS meeting produces a written statement endorsing Iran's sequencing, it gives Tehran a diplomatic document it can use to resist US pressure for a different order of events. India, as chair of the meeting, will effectively decide whether that document is strong or weak.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's pivot to the BRICS platform for the 14-15 May meetings reflects the structural failure of the bilateral Pakistan channel to produce new written text since the 9 May deadline . With no fresh paper on the Pakistan track and the US trying to convert China into a pressure lever at the Beijing summit, Tehran needs a multilateral document that encodes its "war-end as prerequisite" position before that position can be pre-empted by a US-China joint statement.

The structural logic of the BRICS platform for Iran mirrors the logic of non-aligned movement summits during the Iran-Iraq War (1980-88): when the bilateral channel is stalled and the great-power dynamic is unfavourable, a third multilateral track produces documentation that constrains what great powers can agree bilaterally.

Tehran is using New Delhi as its documentation layer, knowing that a BRICS foreign ministers' communique carries enough diplomatic weight to be cited in any subsequent UN Security Council draft.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    A BRICS communique endorsing Iran's war-end-first sequencing creates a non-Western diplomatic floor that constrains what a US-China joint statement can say without producing a public divergence the G20 cannot paper over.

  • Risk

    If India steers the BRICS text toward procedural neutrality, Tehran loses its documentation layer and is forced back onto the bilateral Pakistan channel without new multilateral backing.

First Reported In

Update #96 · Hegseth: no AUMF needed. Trump flies east

PressTV· 13 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Lloyd's of London war-risk underwriters
Lloyd's of London war-risk underwriters
Lloyd's kept its Hormuz war-risk designation unchanged at $10-14 million per voyage even as Brent spiked 7%, holding the split from futures that has run since late May. Underwriters require a Security Council resolution or government certification, not a presidential phone call.
Gulf Cooperation Council states
Gulf Cooperation Council states
Gulf states, having written to the IMO rejecting Iran's Hormuz transit authority, watched a fresh missile exchange land on Kuwaiti soil. Riyadh and Abu Dhabi remain caught between US security guarantees and Iranian fire, with no Gulf state co-belligerent except Kuwait.
China
China
Beijing stayed out of the diplomatic rupture, sending no envoy and offering no public position on the suspended talks. China keeps its bilateral energy corridor with Tehran while declining the exposure of a mediating role Trump barred it from anyway.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait's air defences engaged two Iranian ballistic missiles aimed at US forces late on 31 May, the second interception in days after invoking Article 51. Repeated strikes test whether Kuwait's politics can sustain hosting US forces as a de facto co-belligerent.
Lebanon and Hezbollah
Lebanon and Hezbollah
Lebanon announced a partial ceasefire under which Hezbollah pledged to stop attacking Israel, the concrete output of Trump's call. Beirut heads to Washington on 3 June with Israeli forces still inside the south, testing whether the truce survives contact.
Israel under Netanyahu
Israel under Netanyahu
Netanyahu stood down the planned Beirut operation under Trump's pressure but kept his ground advance running toward the Zaharani river, the deepest incursion in 25 years, and disputed Trump's claim that troops had turned around. Israel signalled the halt is tactical, not a wind-down.