Iran told Washington on Monday it will negotiate only with Vice President JD Vance, rejecting both Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner. The Daily Beast, citing Iranian sources, reported the reasoning: "If the negotiations are going to have any outcome, JD Vance should join. With Witkoff and Kushner, nothing will come out of it" 1. Tehran views Vance as more acceptable because of his pre-war scepticism toward Middle Eastern military commitments — including public statements during the 2024 campaign questioning the strategic value of extended US operations in the region. Trump subsequently told reporters that Vance, Secretary of State Rubio, Kushner, and Witkoff are all "in negotiations" — a formulation that neither grants nor refuses the demand.
The request exposes a contradiction at the centre of Iran's diplomatic posture. Parliamentary speaker Ghalibaf — whom Axios identified as the Iranian interlocutor — categorically denied negotiations the previous day, accusing Trump of market manipulation . Yet specifying which American official should sit across the table is itself an act of negotiation. A senior foreign ministry official had already told CBS News that points received through mediators "are being reviewed" 2. Iran is simultaneously denying the process and shaping its terms.
The tactic has precedent. During the negotiations that produced the 2015 JCPOA, Tehran engaged preferentially with Secretary of State John Kerry and Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz — both perceived as institutionally invested in a deal — while resisting channels it considered hostile. The calculus is consistent: identify the interlocutor whose domestic political incentives most align with a negotiated outcome. Vance's public questioning of Middle Eastern military commitments makes him the obvious candidate by that measure. The demand also carries a secondary function: any visible role for Vance in talks would deepen the fracture within the MAGA coalition, where Heritage Foundation president Kevin Roberts has already warned the war risks "stagflation before midterms" and Representative Boebert has declared herself "a no on any war supplementals" 3.
Whether Iran's negotiator demand is a genuine precondition or a stalling tactic remains the central question. The five-day postponement of the power plant strike ultimatum and the emerging 15-point framework — covering IAEA access to all nuclear facilities, handover of enriched uranium, and full sanctions lifting — suggest the administration is sustaining the diplomatic track. Pakistan, Egypt, Oman, and Turkey are confirmed as intermediaries, with an Israeli official telling NPR that planning is under way for talks in Islamabad "later this week" 4. But the 82nd Airborne's deployment orders and active Kharg Island seizure planning arrived on the same day as Iran's negotiator demand. The gap between what the diplomatic track offers and what the military track prepares for grows wider by the day.
