President Masoud Pezeshkian completed an extraordinary rhetorical cycle across a single day. On Saturday morning, he delivered a televised apology to Gulf neighbours and announced the Interim Leadership Council had agreed forces should not attack neighbouring countries . By Saturday evening, the IRGC had ignored the order within hours , Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf publicly attributed continued Gulf strikes to the late Supreme Leader's standing directives , and hardliners labelled any ceasefire "treason" . On Sunday morning, Pezeshkian reversed again, vowing to "step up attacks on US targets": "The more pressure they impose on us, the stronger our response will naturally be."
CBS framed this as Pezeshkian "backtracking from his conciliatory comments." That understates what happened. The president of Iran issued three mutually exclusive policy positions in 24 hours — apology, de-escalation, and escalation. He is not backtracking. He is matching his rhetoric to whoever spoke last because he holds no independent power base. The IRGC did not disobey a strong president; it ignored an irrelevant one. Qom lawmaker Mohammad Manan Raeisi called his apology "humiliating" and urged the Assembly of Experts to accelerate installation of new leadership. Former lawmaker Jalal Rashidi Koochi addressed Pezeshkian directly: "Your message showed no sign of authority."
This is the structural consequence of Iran's dual-authority system operating without its apex. The Supreme Leader commands the armed forces; the president administers the civilian government. With Khamenei dead and no successor installed, the president cannot fill the vacuum — he lacks the constitutional standing. Ghalibaf's public statement that The Gulf strikes followed the late Supreme Leader's directives invoked a dead man's authority over a living president's order. Under Iran's constitutional logic, Ghalibaf's position is arguably correct: Khamenei's last known directive outranks Pezeshkian's improvised Ceasefire. The body meant to exercise supreme authority — the Interim Leadership Council — is now publicly split, with its most powerful member contradicting its stated policy on state television.
For any external party — Gulf States, the United States, the Egypt-Turkey-Oman mediation channel — the operational conclusion is plain: nothing the Iranian president says constitutes Iranian policy. Only the IRGC's actions constitute policy, and the IRGC is not talking to anyone. Iran's foreign minister closed the door on negotiations days ago . The diplomatic channel that might carry a Ceasefire offer has no authority behind it. The military force that has authority issues no offers. The gap between Iran's words and Iran's actions is not ambiguity — it is the absence of a functioning state.
