Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of Russia's Security Council, attended the Tehran funeral as Vladimir Putin's personal envoy and wrote on Telegram that Iran's ability to disrupt the Strait of Hormuz "is equivalent to possession of a nuclear weapon" 1. the strait is the shipping channel through which roughly a fifth of the world's oil passes, and Iran sits on its northern shore. Medvedev added that Iran will "prevail" over the United States, and of the paused Doha negotiating track said: "negotiations are good, but they must be concluded with a result" 2.
TASS (Russia's state news agency) reported that Medvedev also reaffirmed the Russia-Iran comprehensive strategic partnership treaty, the 2025 pact formalising cooperation between the two states 3. His delegation carried Orthodox, Sunni and Shia clergy, a religious-diplomacy gesture more than a government-to-government one.
The framing matters more than the theatre. Since the war's opening weeks, Iran's grip on the strait has been treated as a commercial-disruption risk, a threat to oil prices and shipping schedules. Medvedev, speaking for a nuclear-armed partner, recast it as a strategic deterrent in its own right, the most explicit external endorsement yet of the chokepoint as a weapon Iran already holds. That gives Tehran outside cover to treat any future interdiction as deterrence rather than economic warfare.
Yet Putin stayed home and sent a deputy, matching China, which also sent its own deputy while Pakistan's prime minister came in person and Europe was left off the guest list entirely . The nuclear-weapon analogy is cheap to voice and costly to disown, which is why it arrived on Medvedev's Telegram feed rather than in a Kremlin statement. Russia is signalling alignment while withholding the personal Putin commitment that would raise the stakes.
