Women in black chadors protested outside Iran's foreign ministry office in Mashhad on Saturday 13 June, chanting "death to the dishonourable Araghchi, the infiltrator" 1. They accuse the foreign minister of conceding too much and surrendering the Hormuz leverage Iran spent the war building. The semi-official Fars News Agency circulated the footage, a signal that hardline media chose to amplify the dissent rather than bury it. Mashhad is a conservative stronghold in Khorasan, a Shia pilgrimage centre and no reformist city, so this is opposition from Iran's right.
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Iran's parallel military authority, gave the protest its political frame. The corps' political deputy said Iran was negotiating "from a position of strength" with "conditions imposed on the other party" 2. The corps has neither endorsed the memorandum nor vetoed it. It is doing something more useful to itself: casting any deal as an Iranian victory, which lets it manage a hardline base it cannot fully command.
The corps backed the framing with force. The IRGC ran naval exercises in the strait of Hormuz during the Geneva talks, days after declaring the strait closed to all shipping on 11 June , even as its own foreign ministry conceded ground in Switzerland. Araghchi's concession in Geneva and the corps' exercise in the strait work as two halves of one position: the civilian track gives ground on paper while the IRGC keeps its hand on the chokepoint the paper is meant to reopen.
