Consensus view: Lina Khatib of the Carnegie Middle East Center and researchers at the Stimson Center's Middle East Programme assessed Iran's 28 June posture, striking and skipping simultaneously, as a structurally deliberate dual-track manoeuvre: the IRGC escalates militarily to shift the negotiating floor while the civilian foreign ministry preserves formal deniability by being absent from a session it could not attend while missiles were in the air.
The 30 June monitoring presence in Doha, watching rather than negotiating, then allows Iran to claim procedural engagement without substantive concession.
Counter-view: Hosein Mousavian, a former Iranian nuclear negotiator now at Princeton's Program on Science and Global Security, and analysts at Iranian Diplomacy (irdiplomacy.ir) interpreted the posture differently: the strikes were an IRGC action the civilian foreign ministry could not prevent or publicly distance from, and the Doha monitoring presence reflected Araghchi's attempt to recover a civilian diplomatic stake after the corps had acted unilaterally.
On this reading, the dual-track behaviour signals internal incoherence rather than coordinated strategy.
Key tension: Whether Iran's simultaneous military escalation and diplomatic observation reflects a unified state strategy or a civilian-IRGC split that Araghchi cannot bridge, because the short-term leverage produced is identical in either case but the implications for a final deal differ sharply.