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Pakistan's Role in US-Iran De-escalation Talks

Thursday, May 21, 2026
5 min read
Pakistan's Role in US-Iran De-escalation Talks

Pakistan’s traditional heavyweights? They’re completely out of the loop.

Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi—he’s acting straight as a proxy for his relative, Field Marshal Asim Munir—has landed in Tehran again. This is his third emergency trip.

He’s locked in face-to-face talks with Brigadier General Ahmad Vahidi. That’s the Commander-in-Chief of the IRGC. They are hammering out the final terms for Washington’s latest, super sensitive de-escalation response.

It’s a huge shift. Pakistan has suddenly become the main, unyielding backchannel between Washington and Tehran. CNN-News18 got the scoop. Naqvi touched down in Tehran Wednesday. Third visit in less than five days. Fast.

Naqvi is carrying a fresh response from the US government. It’s going straight to the top of Iranian hard power.

But the real bombshell isn't the message itself. It’s how they set up the negotiation teams. It’s a complete, ruthless overhaul. No more standard diplomatic stuff. This isn’t just talking. It’s a high-security transaction. Managed by military proxies. Trusted bloodlines.

The civilian foreign policy setup? It’s been completely bypassed. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar, Defence Minister Khawaja Asif. They are completely cut out of this backchannel pipeline.

Why? Because the real center of gravity in Islamabad is the military establishment. That’s where the operational mechanics of the peace talks are being driven.

Naqvi stepped forward. He’s the only one left. The single, indisputable intermediary for the whole operation. This comes down to deep domestic ties. Naqvi has an intensely close relationship with Field Marshal Munir. He’s operating as a direct proxy for the Army Chief.

That’s how they built the pipeline. Munir used Naqvi. It creates a hyper-insulated line. The military leadership can directly control the security guarantees offered to the US and Iran. No unpredictable friction from domestic civilian politics messing things up.

The change on the Iranian side is equally profound. Forget the usual layers of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Naqvi’s trips brought him straight to the ultimate arbiter of state security.

He’s talking directly to General Vahidi. The IRGC chief. This access is massive. Vahidi controls all the state’s external security operations. All the regional networks. Any deal he makes with Munir’s representative has instant, enforceable authority on the ground.

The speed of the travel itinerary tells you everything about the urgency. It’s a zero-hour negotiation process.

Saturday, May 16. Naqvi flies to Tehran for the first time. Direct contact with Iranian authorities established.

Sunday, May 17. He flies back to Pakistan. Briefing domestic folks on Tehran’s initial mood.

Monday, May 18. Within hours of landing, he’s back in Tehran for another round of talks.

Tuesday, May 19. Naqvi lands in Quetta for an emergency debrief. A joint military-civilian review of the security vectors. The final dynamic of Washington’s inputs? It’s Green-lit.

Wednesday, May 20. Back to Tehran for the third time. Straight into sessions with IRGC Chief Ahmad Vahidi. The pressure is immense.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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