Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi delivered his most direct refusal of negotiations on Thursday: "We are not asking for Ceasefire. We don't see any reason why we should negotiate when we negotiated with them twice and every time they attacked us in the middle of negotiations."
The statement closes the last diplomatic channel that had shown flexibility. Araghchi was the official who told Oman's Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi just days ago that Tehran was "open to serious efforts that contribute to stopping the escalation" . Before Araghchi's reversal, national security chief Ali Larijani declared "We will not negotiate with the United States" , and Acting President Mokhber told ILNA that Iran had "no intention" of talks . The security establishment, the executive branch, and now the foreign ministry have each shut their doors independently.
Araghchi's stated rationale — "we negotiated with them twice and every time they attacked us" — references a specific grievance. The 2015 JCPOA was negotiated, signed, and unilaterally abandoned by the Trump administration in 2018, followed by a maximum-pressure sanctions campaign. The intelligence back-channel through a third country's service was exposed by the New York Times and publicly killed by Trump with "Too Late!" within hours . Whether or not one accepts Tehran's framing, the pattern Araghchi describes — engage diplomatically, then face consequences — is the pattern Iranian decision-makers experienced. His shift from "open to serious efforts" to outright refusal in under 72 hours suggests the back-channel's public death was the proximate cause.
The practical effect: the Egypt-Turkey-Oman Mediation bid launched Thursday arrives with no Iranian interlocutor willing to engage. Oman's FM Albusaidi told Araghchi directly, "There are off-ramps available. Let's use them." Araghchi's response was to publicly explain why Iran will not take them. The war now has a military track — escalating — and a diplomatic track with no participants.
