The world stands at a terrifying crossroads as American and Iranian officials prepare to sit across from one another for the highest–level direct negotiations between the two countries since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
In a dramatic, last–ditch effort to prevent the unraveling of a ceasefire hanging by a thread, Vice President JD Vance, Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are traveling to Islamabad to face to face off against Tehran’s battle–hardened negotiator, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf.
Ghalibaf, the speaker of the Iranian parliament, is an infamous butcher known as the ‘rooftop killer‘ who hurled students from the tops of buildings during protests in the late 1990s.
To many, the very presence of Vance to lead talks – rather than a traditional diplomat– is a significant concession to this brutal leadership.
Noticeably missing from the diplomatic mission? The Secretary of State, Marco Rubio.
Jonathan Wachtel, global affairs analyst and former senior policy advisor at the US mission to the UN, called sending Vance ‘a strategic error.’
‘Elevating the talks to the vice presidential level raises the stakes unnecessarily and, worse, rewards this murderous regime’s attempt to dictate who sits across the table. You never allow an adversary to choose your negotiating team.’
A White House official pushed back against reports that the Iranians requested Vance to lead the American team, calling it a ‘clearly coordinated propaganda campaign.’
‘It’s utterly false and peddled to attempt to quash negotiations,’ the official said. ‘President Trump asked Vice President Vance to lead the negotiations.’
The world stands at a terrifying crossroads as American and Iranian officials prepare to sit across from one another for the highest–level direct negotiations between the two countries since the 1979 Islamic Revolution
Qalibaf, the speaker of the Iranian parliament, is an infamous butcher known as the ‘ rooftop killer’ who hurled students from the tops of buildings during protests in the late 1990s, ordered the shooting of demonstrators, and bragged of beating others with batons
Vice President JD Vance boards Air Force Two on his way to Pakistan for talks on Iran
President Trump said Friday that Vance ‘has nothing to prove.’
Despite Vance’s long–standing skepticism of foreign intervention and initial doubts about targeting Iran, he has spent weeks quietly maneuvering to secure a permanent diplomatic agreement, according to two sources familiar with plans.
The push for a resolution comes at a crucial political juncture for the Vice President.
A new Daily Mail/JL Partners poll of 1,000 registered voters this week found that Vance’s approval rating has remained buoyant and has not been impacted by the recent conflict in the Middle East.
He retains a solid foundation, where nearly 50 percent of voters say they approve of the job he is doing. However, the poll also highlighted a ‘readiness gap’: 39 percent of Americans believe he is ready to serve as Commander–in–Chief, while 48 percent say he is not yet prepared.
After six weeks of devastating aerial exchanges that have seen Iranian infrastructure decimated and global energy prices skyrocket, the two old enemies are attempting to turn a precarious 14–day ‘pause’ into a lasting peace.
This will be the ultimate test for the anti–war Vance, who said on Friday on his way to Pakistan that the President has some ‘pretty clear guidelines’ but thinks ‘it’s going to be positive.’
‘If the Iranians are willing to negotiate in good faith and extend an open hand, that’s one thing… If they’re going to try to play us, they’re going to find that the negotiating team is not that receptive,’ Vance said.
But former US diplomat Brett Bruen warns that the Trump administration’s past performance casts a long shadow over these talks.
‘Details have not proven to be a strong suit for Team Trump. They brushed past them with most of their purported ‘peace agreements’ that were struck,’ Bruen says. ‘Yet, now engaged in their own war, they really matter.’
The very foundation of the peace summit is already crumbling under the weight of shattering contradictions.
At the White House briefing this week, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt explained the latest: a 10–point counter–proposal that Iran sent to Trump earlier in the week was rejected and redone to match the White House’s earlier 15–point proposal, adding that they were given signs that they would turn over their enriched uranium.
At the White House briefing this week, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt explained the latest: a 10–point counter–proposal that Iran sent to Trump earlier in the week was rejected and redone to match the White House’s earlier 15–point proposal, adding that they were given signs that they would turn over their enriched uranium
Despite his long–standing skepticism of foreign intervention and initial doubts about targeting Iran, Vance has spent weeks quietly maneuvering to secure a permanent diplomatic agreement, according to two sources familiar with plans
This will be the ultimate test for the anti–war Vance, who said on Friday on his way to Pakistan that the President has some ‘pretty clear guidelines’ but said he thinks ‘it’s going to be positive’
A cloud of uncertainty hung April 10 over the scheduled start of talks in Pakistan between the United States and Iran, with no announcement yet on the arrival of negotiators and both sides accusing the other of failing to properly implement a fragile ceasefire
As the clock ticks down toward a Saturday morning deadline, the atmosphere in Islamabad is described as ‘electric with tension’
The main sticking point between the two plans involved Iran’s ambitions to enrich uranium and therefore, progress towards a nuclear weapon.
Mark Wallace, a former US ambassador to the UN, warns that American negotiators risk misreading Iranian intentions by projecting Western assumptions onto a regime whose core ideology is fundamentally hostile to both the US. and Israel, revealing a potential blind spot in negotiations.
‘We have an unfortunate habit of overlaying our Western value system over the regime’s revolutionary death to America and Israel rationale,’ Wallace explained to the Daily Mail.
For hawks, any deal made now is a missed opportunity to end the threat once and for all.
‘The problem with negotiating with the regime is that it can never be trusted,’ says Len Khodorkovsky, former senior advisor to the US envoy for Iran. ‘Taking our foot off the gas pedal and allowing the bad guys to catch their breath may lead to some deal, but likely not the best deal. Anything less than regime change guarantees we’ll have to keep coming back.’
Tehran’s leaders have already touched down in Islamabad with their own counter–proposal, firmly demanding the withdrawal of American troops from the Middle East and a ‘hands–off’ policy regarding the Strait of Hormuz.
Wachtel argues that giving an inch on the strait would be a global catastrophe.
‘Allowing the IRGC to police, tax or intimidate traffic through Hormuz is utterly unacceptable,’ he said.
As the clock ticks down toward a Saturday morning deadline, the atmosphere in Islamabad is described as ‘electric with tension.’
If these talks fail, the two–week truce’ will expire, likely triggering a resumption of hostilities that President Trump has warned could lead to a conflict where ‘a whole civilization will die’
Iranians formed a human chain in front of energy facilities to protect them from the US attack. Their government asked them to come and ‘bring their children’ after President Trump said he would ‘end civilization in Iran’ unless their leaders came to the table
In a dramatic, last–ditch effort to prevent the unraveling of a ceasefire hanging by a thread, Vice President JD Vance , Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are traveling to Islamabad. They are set to touch down in the Pakistani capital to face off against Tehran’s battle–hardened negotiator, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf
Hundreds of security personnel are flooding the streets as Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif attempts to play the role of the century’s most unlikely peacemaker.
Even if a symbolic handshake occurs, diplomats are skeptical of how long it will last.
Bruen notes: ‘No one in those rooms knows if or for how long any deal might last. That makes this diplomacy especially difficult. Tehran doesn’t want to make major compromises once they feel like their position has been strengthened during the war.’
If these talks fail, the two–week truce will expire, likely triggering a resumption of hostilities that President Trump has warned could lead to a conflict where ‘a whole civilization will die.’
On February 28, the US and Israel first launched Operation Epic Fury, a massive, coordinated strike across Iran. The operation targeted nuclear facilities, missile sites and leadership compounds. Notably, these strikes resulted in the death of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
The US has confirmed 13 service members killed and over 380 wounded, according to data provided Wednesday by US Central Command.
On the Iranian side, the figures are far more severe and heavily disputed, with estimates of military fatalities ranging from 1,200 to over 3,000, according to Human Rights Activists in Iran.
