Iranian lawmaker Mahmoud Nabavian said on 16 June that the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding would make Iran "a colony of the United States". Paydari Front MP Hossein Samsami called nuclear and regional negotiations impermissible; hardline lawmaker Amirhossein Sabeti said it violates The Supreme Leader's red lines 1. Around 60 MPs have demanded Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf justify his signature .
The noise carries no blocking power. Alex Vatanka of the Middle East Institute, a Washington think tank, judges the hardliners "loud, but they have a weak case to make"; Jason Brodsky of United Against Nuclear Iran assesses that "The Supreme Leader made a decision, and that's going to carry the day" 2. Mojtaba Khamenei has said nothing publicly about the deal, and no named IRGC officer has spoken for or against it.
That silence is what lets the agreement proceed: it commits the corps to nothing while denying the hardliners a leader to rally behind. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has held day-to-day war authority since Khamenei vanished from view in March , and the corps has chosen to stay silent rather than endorse or veto. A revolt of around sixty backbenchers without a single senior cleric, general or The Supreme Leader behind it cannot override a decision the office that outranks them all has already taken in private.
