A Qatari delegation led by an adviser to Qatar's foreign minister arrived in Mashhad on 10 July to meet Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, the first move to reopen the Doha channel since it went dark for Ali Khamenei's funeral . Reuters sources describe the visit as a de-escalation push coordinated with Washington 1. Qatar has brokered indirect US-Iran contact through Doha for years, giving both sides a venue neither has to be seen entering.
No date was set for resumed direct talks, which Pakistani sources had pencilled for Doha in the third week of July once the funeral concluded on 9 July . The envoy went to Mashhad rather than Tehran, meeting Araghchi on the ground where Iran had just closed its airspace to bury its Supreme Leader.
Doha is mediating while absorbing a strike it says landed on its own territory during the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) barrage on Gulf states on 9 July . Qatar summoned Iran's envoy over that hit, then, the same day, its prime minister telephoned Araghchi urging diplomacy. Running protest and mediation together is how a small Gulf state stays indispensable to both Washington and Tehran, absorbing the hit rather than walking, because the channel is worth more to Doha than the grievance.
