US Vice President JD Vance attended direct talks with Iran's delegation in Switzerland on Sunday 21 June, two days after a wire report said he had cancelled the trip and Iran had withheld its negotiators . Vance sat alongside special envoy Steve Witkoff and, per Al Jazeera, Jared Kushner; Iran sent parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi 1. Pakistan's army chief Asim Munir and Qatar co-mediated. Qatar's foreign ministry confirmed negotiations opened, and Al Jazeera reported the first round concluded the same day 2.
This is the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in motion for the first time since the two sides signed it on 15 June . the MOU is the Pakistan-and-Qatar-brokered framework covering the ceasefire, the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and the deferred nuclear question. Readers arriving cold need one fact to orient them: the deal exists on paper, but almost none of its promised steps have landed. The Switzerland round gives each side its first venue to test whether the other will deliver on the MOU's terms.
Look at what moved Vance. On Friday 19 June he was off the plane, Iran had pulled its negotiators, and IRGC boats had fired warning shots in the strait. On Saturday 20 June the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) declared Hormuz shut. On Sunday Vance flew anyway and the talks began. The sequence reads one way: Iran's escalation pried the trip loose, not any signed US instrument. Five days after Donald Trump declared the war over and ordered Hormuz reopened without tolls , the only American move that materialised was a diplomat boarding an aircraft.
The mediation channel carries its own weight. Munir's general-officer line into Tehran reaches the IRGC, which holds day-to-day war authority that Araghchi's ministry does not. Routing Iran through Witkoff and Kushner rather than the State Department also keeps the process off the instrument register that Congress can subpoena, which fits a White House that has produced declarations on Iran for months but no signed paper.
