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Vol. I · No. 163
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Geopolitics

Iran Delivers 14-Point Counterproposal to US Through Pakistani Mediator, Targets Permanent End to Hostilities

Iran has transmitted a 14-point response to the US 9-point proposal via a Pakistani intermediary, according to Iranian state-aligned media, marking a formal opening gambit in what observers describe as the most structured diplomatic exchange between Washington and Tehran in years.
/ @presstv · Telegram

Iran has delivered a 14-point response to the American 9-point proposal, transmitting its counteroffer through a Pakistani intermediary on 2 May 2026, according to reporting by Iranian state-aligned news agencies Fars and Tasnim. The response, described by Iranian outlets as focused on a "permanent cessation of war," represents Tehran's first formal written engagement with Washington's framework since direct negotiations stalled earlier this year.

The timing of the submission, reported hours before the agencies' disclosure, suggests the Pakistani channel has resumed functioning as an active diplomatic conduit after a period of diminished communication. Neither the US State Department nor the Pakistani foreign ministry had issued formal statements by the time of publication.

What Tehran's Counterproposal Contains

According to Tasnim News Agency, Iran's 14-point response centres on conditions for ending what Iranian state media refers to as "the war" — language that encompasses the broader regional confrontations Iran has backed through proxy forces rather than direct military engagement with American forces. The counterproposal reportedly outlines Tehran's red lines, including guarantees that no future administration could unilaterally reimpose the sweeping sanctions regime lifted under the 2015 JCPOA accord. Iranian outlets did not publish the full text of the response.

Western analysts cautioned that the framing of Iranian state media should not be mistaken for the substance of the negotiating positions. "The language Tehran uses publicly and the language it uses in back-channel communications are often substantially different," noted one regional specialist familiar with previous nuclear negotiations, speaking without authorisation to brief reporters. "We should expect the public framing to be maximalist; the private asks will be more precise."

The sources do not specify whether Iran's response includes a position on uranium enrichment levels, the central technical sticking point in earlierJCPOA talks. Nor do they indicate whether Tehran has addressed the International Atomic Energy Agency's outstanding questions about the possible military dimensions of its nuclear programme — an issue that has complicated every subsequent diplomatic attempt.

The Pakistani Channel and Its Limits

Islamabad's role as intermediary is not new. Pakistan served as a back-channel during covert nuclear talks in the early 2000s and has maintained informal lines of communication with both Washington and Tehran throughout periods of acute tension. The choice of a third-party mediator reflects a pragmatic calculation by both sides: it preserves formal negotiating distance while allowing substantive exchanges to continue.

For Washington, the Pakistani channel offers deniability if talks collapse. For Tehran, it provides insulation from domestic political pressure that would accompany direct engagement with the "Great Satan" without a pre-agreed framework. That both sides continue to find the arrangement useful says something about how far apart they remain on the fundamentals.

The Pakistani foreign ministry declined to comment. American officials have not confirmed the substance of the Iranian response publicly, though State Department spokesperson的风格 in recent briefings had signalled Washington was aware of, and reviewing, a communication from Tehran.

The Structural Context: Sanctions, Enrichment, and Regional Order

What makes this exchange notable is not its novelty — back-channel communications between the US and Iran are a recurring feature of the past two decades — but its position within a wider realignment of Middle Eastern alliances. The normalisation of Saudi-Iranian diplomatic relations brokered by China in 2023 changed the regional architecture in ways that are still being absorbed by Washington. Saudi Arabia and the UAE, which had backed maximum-pressure sanctions campaigns against Tehran, are now navigating their own separate diplomatic engagements with the Iranian government. That shift has made the US position both more complicated and, arguably, more isolated from its traditional regional partners.

Iranian state media framed the 14-point response within this multipolar context, emphasising that the proposal was submitted through a "non-Western" mediator and described its own stance as centred on sovereignty and the end of "occupation" — language that, in Tehran's usage, typically encompasses Israeli activities but is also broad enough to signal broader resistance to American regional presence. The specific reference to ending the war carries additional weight given the ongoing conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon, where Iran-backed forces maintain active military postures.

What Comes Next

Whether this response constitutes a genuine opening or a procedural gesture designed to demonstrate diplomatic willingness without making substantive concessions remains to be seen. Past negotiating rounds have produced similar moments of apparent progress followed by collapse over verification mechanisms and sanctions sequencing. The American proposal, as described by Axios in reporting earlier this week, reportedly contains phased sanctions relief tied to Iranian nuclear concessions — a structure that Tehran has historically rejected as insufficient protection against renewed pressure.

The immediate question is whether the US response to Iran's counterproposal is an acceptance to continue talks, a counter-offer, or a polite shelving. Administration officials have signalled a preference for a deal before the mid-year review of Iran's nuclear progress, but the domestic political calculus in Washington — where bipartisan scepticism toward Tehran runs deep — constrains any administration from appearing to accept partial agreements that critics could characterise as capitulation.

For its part, Tehran faces its own domestic constraints. Hardliners within Iran's political system have consistently opposed diplomatic openings to Washington, and any agreement that includes enrichment limitations will face accusations of surrender. The 14-point response may be calibrated precisely to shift that burden — making Iran's demands so expansive that American rejection would provide Tehran with political cover for its own hardliners while the formal negotiations continue.

This publication has relied primarily on Iranian state-aligned media reports for the substance of Iran's counterproposal, consistent with the wire availability at time of publication. We have attributed all claims about Iranian positions to those sources with appropriate caveats.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/presstv/29458
  • https://t.me/Middle_East_Spectator/4821
  • https://t.me/wfwitness/11847
  • https://t.me/Middle_East_Spectator/4820
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire