Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif attended the Tehran funeral in person, the most senior sitting head of government confirmed among the guests 1. China sent He Wei, a vice-chair of its National People's Congress (NPC) standing committee, China's national legislature, rather than a head of state. No Western government sent a delegation at all.
Iran claimed more than 100 countries were represented, but the named delegations skewed to deputy level: India's deputy foreign minister, a state governor, envoys rather than principals. Russia sent Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of its Security Council, as Vladimir Putin's personal envoy rather than the president. Sharif's decision to come himself sits apart from that tier.
Islamabad is the one capital both Washington and Tehran still use to pass messages, and it set the signal that the next US-Iran round is pencilled for Doha in late July . Sending its prime minister to Tehran while keeping that Washington line open puts Pakistan in a position no other government holds. Army Chief Asim Munir's April shuttle to Tehran produced the only nuclear-monitoring movement of the conflict, and Sharif's appearance converts that back-channel utility into open diplomatic standing.
