Abbas Araghchi, Iran's Foreign Minister, travels to New Delhi on 14-15 May 2026 for the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa bloc) foreign ministers meeting, chaired by India and including Russia's Sergey Lavrov and India's Subrahmanyam Jaishankar 1. The trip runs on the same two days Donald Trump sits across from Xi Jinping in Beijing. Iran's top diplomat will be in the next room with the two BRICS counterparts most able to underwrite a non-Western verification mechanism for Hormuz on the same days the US tries to convert China into a pressure lever.
Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman Ismail Baghaei set the precondition on 12 May: ending the war and lifting the Hormuz blockade are "prerequisites" to any resumption of nuclear talks 2. Araghchi has held four high-level calls with Jaishankar since the war began on 28 February. India's own interests (stable crude supply, the safety of Indian crews on Iranian-routed tankers, and the Indian firms named in earlier OFAC designations) make Delhi a less-than-reliable conduit for US pressure. The pivot to the multilateral track followed Iran's silence after the 9 May deadline ; the bilateral channel held no fresh text, so Araghchi went looking for one elsewhere.
BRICS foreign ministers meetings have historically produced communiques on third-country conflicts that the West then negotiates against in subsequent UN Security Council drafts. The 2022 Samarkand communique on Ukraine was the template: agreed BRICS language constrained subsequent G7 positions because the alternative was a public divergence the G20 could not paper over. Delhi 14-15 May is now in that template's slot. The IAEA, locked out of Iran since the Majlis suspended all cooperation in April, would be required for any Western verification mechanism Iran has now pre-conditioned on war-end. The parallel-summits architecture is the product of 75 days during which neither side has signed anything; each is now building the multilateral backing it will need if a written deal ever has to converge.
