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Pakistan carries US memo to Tehran

4 min read
16:30UTC

Pakistan carried a one-page US memorandum into Tehran on Thursday 7 May; Iran's Foreign Ministry confirmed receipt and Brent settled at $99.40, the first sub-$100 close of the war.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Pakistan delivered the first US written paper of the war; Brent closed below $100.

Pakistan carried a one-page US memorandum of understanding (MOU) into Tehran on Thursday 7 May 2026, the first paper to move from Washington to Tehran in 67 days of war. Esmaeil Baqaei, spokesman for Iran's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told reporters the same day that Iranian negotiators are reviewing the text and will route their reply back through Islamabad 1. NBC News and Al Jazeera describe the document as proposing a formal end to the conflict, the lifting of the US naval blockade, and a phased reopening of the Strait of Hormuz over 30 days, with the nuclear file held back to a separate later track 2.

The channel matters as much as the text. Three earlier Iranian written texts ran the other way and produced verbal US replies: Iran's three-phase ceasefire on 27 April, the revised two-phase text on 28 April, and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi's 14-point proposal on 1 May , each of which produced a Truth Social rejection rather than a written reply . The fourth round produces the first US written response, and Ishaq Dar's 6 May confirmation that Pakistan brokered the first US-Iran direct talks in 47 years put the back-channel on the record the day before the paper landed.

The market priced the paper, not the post. Brent July futures settled at $99.40 on ICE Futures Europe the same session, touching an intraday low of $96.73 and closing 1.85 per cent down on the day, the first sub-$100 close since Operation EPIC FURY began on 28 February 3. The four-session cumulative fall ran to $9.11 a barrel against the 6 May settlement of $108.51 , with the diplomatic triggers of Project Freedom's launch and pause carrying the curve down. Trump's accompanying Truth Social post, which threatened that "the bombing starts" if Iran refused, produced no bid.

Baqaei went on the record; Iran's state news agency ISNA dismissed the "memorandum" label as media speculation while not denying the document; the White House has not publicly confirmed authorship. The Pakistani channel preserves Trump's option to disown the paper as an Islamabad initiative if Tehran rejects it. What is not contested is the price action: Brent had crossed $123 the morning the United Arab Emirates quit OPEC on 1 May, and a $9 retracement in four sessions translates to roughly 9 pence per litre of pump-price headroom in UK haulage and forecourt pricing.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran and the United States have been at war since late February 2026, when the US and Israel struck Iranian cities. The US then blockaded the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow sea channel through which about a fifth of the world's oil normally flows. The two countries have not had an embassy in each other's country since 1979, so they have been passing messages through Pakistan, a neighbouring country willing to act as a go-between. On 7 May, Pakistan physically carried a one-page document from Washington to Tehran. Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei confirmed on the record that Iranian negotiators were reviewing it and would reply via Pakistan. The document reportedly proposes ending the fighting, lifting the US naval blockade, and reopening the strait over 30 days, with any discussion of Iran's nuclear programme left for later. Brent crude fell below $100 per barrel for the first time since the war started, as oil markets read the document as a genuine step toward ending the conflict.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Three structural conditions made a Pakistani-carried document the only possible form for the first US-side written instrument. The United States has had no embassy in Tehran since 1979 and no formal diplomatic channel, so a third-country carrier is the only mechanism that produces a legally credible paper trail without implying direct recognition of the Islamic Republic's terms.

Pakistan's position is structurally suited to the role: it shares a 959-kilometre land border with Iran, has a $3 billion Saudi debt-assistance package underwriting its mediating role, and holds nuclear-power status that prevents either Washington or Tehran from dismissing Islamabad as a minor interlocutor.

The 67-day gap since the last paper exchange is itself a root condition. Iran's three prior written texts (27 April three-phase, 28 April two-phase, 1 May 14-point) each produced verbal Truth Social rejections, not written US responses. The asymmetry between Iran's written posture and the US verbal-only approach was Tehran's stated grievance throughout April and early May. The MOU resolves that grievance in form while leaving the substance contested.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Iran's written reply through Pakistan, expected within days, will either confirm or collapse the negotiating architecture Pakistan spent 47 years building credibility to host.

    Immediate · 0.8
  • Risk

    The MOU's silence on the Persian Gulf Strait Authority means any ceasefire agreement leaves Iran's domestic-law permitting framework (ID:3042) unresolved, creating an enforcement vacuum the IRGC can exploit post-ceasefire.

    Short term · 0.75
  • Opportunity

    The 14-15 May Trump-Xi summit gains a live written track from both the US and Iran sides, giving Beijing a concrete object to endorse rather than a verbal channel to manage.

    Short term · 0.7
  • Precedent

    A Pakistani-brokered written exchange between the US and Iran produces the first documented precedent for Islamabad as a permanent US-Iran communications channel, institutionalising a role Pakistan has sought since 1979.

    Long term · 0.65
First Reported In

Update #90 · Pakistan carries paper; Brent below $100

NPR· 7 May 2026
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