Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
3JUN

Pakistan mediation live, unwritten and only partial

3 min read
09:04UTC

Esmail Baghaei confirmed on 20 May that Pakistan has relayed a fresh round of corrective points between Tehran and Washington; Tasnim's parallel oil-sanctions waiver claim has no US-side corroboration.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Pakistan is relaying corrective points between Tehran and Washington, yet neither side has produced a signed counter-text.

Esmail Baghaei, the Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman, confirmed on 20 May 2026 that the Pakistan-mediated channel remains active 1. "We received a set of corrective points and considerations from the Pakistani mediator," Baghaei said. "Our points of view were presented to the American side in return. Therefore, the process continues through Pakistan."

Baghaei's confirmation marks the third documented exchange in the sub-cycle. Iran transmitted a 10-point counter-MOU on 10 May; Donald Trump rejected it on Truth Social as "totally unacceptable"; Pakistan has now relayed a fresh round of corrective points in return. Neither side is working from a shared text; both are annotating each other's positions.

Tasnim also reported on 18 May that the US had agreed in a new text to suspend oil sanctions during the negotiation period. The claim cites an anonymous source close to Iran's negotiating team and has no US-side corroboration: no executive order on 19-20 May, no OFAC general licence, no Federal Register entry, no White House action covered the zero-instrument count across 16-18 May; the 19-20 window extends the streak. The OFAC SDN round on 19 May targeted vessels and shells , not a sanction suspension. The Senate's procedural discharge of the Kaine resolution deadline opened the political vulnerability the verbal track has not yet answered with paper.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Pakistan is acting as a go-between in the US-Iran negotiations. Iran talks to Pakistan, Pakistan tells the US, the US responds, Pakistan tells Iran. The two sides have never met face-to-face. On 20 May, Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman confirmed this channel is still working: Pakistan has delivered a new set of suggested changes from the US side. Iran has sent its own response back. But neither side has yet agreed on a shared document they are both working towards. Iran's state news agency also claimed the US has agreed to pause oil sanctions during negotiations. As of 20 May, no US official has confirmed this and no document to that effect has appeared.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Pakistan mediates because it is one of the few states with simultaneous institutional credibility in Washington (military-to-military ties, CENTCOM interoperability) and Tehran (border relationship, Baloch population, energy imports from Iran). Field Marshal Munir's personal credibility with both IRGC leadership and the Trump administration's senior military figures gives him a contact network no career diplomat could replicate.

The channel's structural limitation is that Pakistan cannot bridge the gap between Iran's demand for domestic uranium stockpile dilution (rather than transfer) and the US demand for physical removal outside Iran. That is a technical nuclear-verification problem, not a diplomatic communication problem; no intermediary can resolve it without an IAEA inspection regime, which Iran's Majlis voted 221-0 to suspend.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    The Tasnim oil-sanctions waiver claim, if false, sets Iranian domestic expectations that the US will not meet; a public US denial of the claim would damage the channel's credibility faster than any formal breakdown.

    Immediate · 0.7
  • Consequence

    Three sub-cycle exchanges since 10 May without converging on shared text means the gap is structural (document count, framework) rather than positional (terms within a shared document); a fourth exchange in the same format is unlikely to resolve it.

    Short term · 0.75
  • Opportunity

    Pakistan's Asim Munir secured Iran's in-principle nuclear-monitoring concession in April through informal assurances outside the written text. A similar informal side-agreement on sanctions modalities may be where the real settlement lies, with formal documents following later.

    Medium term · 0.55
First Reported In

Update #103 · Senate 50-47; UNSC at Barakah; no US paper

Tasnim News Agency / IRNA· 20 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Lloyd's of London underwriters
Lloyd's of London underwriters
Lloyd's held its Hormuz war-risk rate at $10-14 million per voyage; underwriters need a UN Security Council resolution or formal PGSA de-listing before repricing, not a Senate testimony. The PGSA remains on the SDN list under EO 13224, so any vessel transiting a nominally reopened strait still deals with a sanctioned counterparty.
Saudi Arabia and Gulf states
Saudi Arabia and Gulf states
Brent crude at $95-97 on 2-3 June reflects Gulf producers benefiting from the conflict premium; a genuine Hormuz deal would likely cut that premium by $10-15 per barrel. Riyadh's $87 per barrel budget breakeven means the current price is comfortable, reducing the Gulf's urgency to push for a rapid settlement.
China
China
OFAC's Nobitex designation leaves China's informal bilateral currency-swap lines with Iran as the CBI's remaining rial-defence mechanism; Chinese financial institutions face secondary-sanctions risk if they interact with successor wallets. Beijing's MOFCOM Blocking Rules protect mainland refineries from direct designation but do not shield informal swap-line counterparties.
Lebanon / Hezbollah
Lebanon / Hezbollah
Lebanon's Washington delegation demanded full Israeli withdrawal and the return of 1.2 million displaced; Hezbollah deployed an FPV drone that killed an Israeli soldier at Yohmor while talks ran, demonstrating it can impose costs even at Israel's deepest penetration point. Lebanon's government cannot deliver the Hezbollah disarmament guarantee Israel demands.
Israel / Benjamin Netanyahu
Israel / Benjamin Netanyahu
Israeli forces seized Beaufort Castle above the Litani on 1-2 June and advanced to within 10 km of the Zaharani river while ceasefire delegations sat in Washington; the advance ran entirely outside the Beirut-only truce Netanyahu accepted on 1 June. Each kilometre taken raises Israel's withdrawal price before any permanent text is signed.
Iran: Foreign Ministry and domestic population
Iran: Foreign Ministry and domestic population
Araghchi rang six capitals in 48 hours to reopen talks the SNSC had suspended, calling the IRGC line 'speculation'; at home, 37 political prisoners were executed since 19 March while students marched in Tehran, Mashhad and Hamadan. The diplomatic thaw has not eased the state's wartime repression tempo.