Ghalibaf's Missiles and the 60-Day Memo: How Tehran Frames the US Nuclear Talks
Iran's Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf delivered a sharp rebuff to the diplomatic track on May 29, arguing that military leverage — not negotiations — extracts concessions from Washington. The remarks landed as a 60-day memorandum of understanding remains on the table.

Iran's Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf delivered a sharp rebuff to the diplomatic track on May 29, arguing that military leverage — not negotiations — extracts concessions from Washington. The remarks, published across Iranian state media channels and corroborated by open-source intelligence trackers monitoring the talks, landed as a 60-day memorandum of understanding remains on the table between the two governments.
According to a transcript distributed by PressTV, Ghalibaf told assembled legislators that Iran does not seize concessions through dialogue but through missiles — and that negotiations serve only to make those gains legible to the other side. "We have no trust in guarantees," he added, in a formulation that signals deep institutional skepticism toward the ongoing diplomatic effort. The statements were picked up by OSINTdefender and GeoPWatch, which flagged the remarks as a significant hardening of the parliamentary position ahead of what analysts describe as a critical window for the Vienna-adjacent track.
The framing is not new to Iranian political discourse. Senior Revolutionary Guard commanders and Foreign Ministry officials have long cycled between maximum-pressure rhetoric and more calibrated diplomatic language depending on the domestic audience and the negotiating phase. What Ghalibaf's intervention adds is the weight of the parliamentary speaker — a figure with his own base among the conservative bloc — inserting himself explicitly into the executive's foreign policy lane. That is unusual enough to warrant attention.
The 60-Day Memorandum and Its Fragile Standing
The memorandum of understanding reportedly on the table between Washington and Tehran is not a formal agreement. It is a stopgap arrangement — a pause mechanism designed to freeze nuclear activity and sanctions escalation while a more durable framework is negotiated. According to reporting that has circulated in regional capitals, the memo includes Iranian limits on uranium enrichment at specific purity levels, partial sanctions relief, and a commitment from the United States to refrain from designating new entities under existing executive authorities.
Ghalibaf's intervention signals that the parliamentary wing of the Iranian state does not consider the memo a credible instrument. The trust deficit he cited is structural: Iran has watched previous diplomatic frameworks collapse — most recently the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, from which the United States unilaterally withdrew in 2018 — and has no appetite to repeat the experience without ironclad guarantees that Congress or a future administration cannot easily overturn. The missile reference, however bluntly wielded, points to the logic that only demonstrated capability — not a signed piece of paper — forces a adversary to yield.
Hardliners Positioning Against the Executive
The Iranian foreign policy architecture is not monolithic. The Rouhani-era negotiators who shepherded the JCPOA are largely sidelined. The Raisi administration, now in its third year, has maintained a careful balance between the hardliners in parliament and the pragmatists within the Foreign Ministry who are managing day-to-day talks. Ghalibaf's statement is, in part, a message to the Raisi team: go slow, extract more from the Americans, and do not sign anything that looks like a repeat of 2015.
That internal pressure is not cosmetic. Iran's parliament can block the implementation of executive agreements through legislative fiat, and it has previously used that authority to complicate ratification of international commitments. The IRGC's parallel influence over foreign policy — exercised through the Supreme National Security Council and through informal channels — adds a second veto point that the Americans and Europeans must navigate. Negotiating with Tehran, in this light, is not simply negotiating with a government: it is negotiating with a layered system in which competing institutions regularly signal different floor positions.
The Strategic Logic Behind the Missile Framing
There is a coherent argument inside the hardliner position, even setting aside the political theatre. Tehran's nuclear programme — its enrichment capacity, its stockpile size, its breakout time — is the single most potent negotiating asset it holds. Every escalation in that capacity raises the cost of military action and increases the leverage available in any diplomatic exchange. The missile reference, then, is not mere bravado: it is a reminder that the nuclear programme itself is the source of whatever influence Iran wields in the current talks.
The Americans know this. The Europeans know this. The 60-day memo, in this reading, is not a sign of diplomatic success but a recognition that a military strike on Iranian nuclear sites would carry costs — in regional escalation, in oil-market disruption, in the hardening of Chinese and Russian positions — that no Western government is currently prepared to absorb. Tehran is reading the same map, which is why its negotiators demand terms that Western officials find exasperating. Neither side has an alternative it likes better.
What This Means for the Current Diplomatic Window
The sources do not specify whether the Raisi administration has responded to Ghalibaf's remarks. Foreign Ministry spokespersons have not publicly contradicted the parliamentary speaker, which itself signals a degree of alignment — or at least a decision not to create an intra-government rift in the middle of sensitive talks. The Americans have likewise declined to comment on the specifics of Ghalibaf's statement, though State Department officials have described the negotiating atmosphere as "challenging but active."
What is clear is that the 60-day memorandum faces a structural headwind. Any agreement reached at executive level must survive the parliament's scrutiny, the IRGC's assessment, and the supreme leader's final sign-off — a chain of authorisation in which any single link can demand renegotiation. Ghalibaf's missile rhetoric, whatever its domestic political logic, adds friction to a process that was already moving slowly.
The desk notes that the Western wire framing of this story focused on the rhetorical escalation — the "missiles not diplomacy" line — without adequate attention to the institutional context that makes such statements structurally significant. Monexus has sought to correct that balance by foregrounding the parliamentary veto dynamic and the trust-deficit problem that underpins Tehran's negotiating posture.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/presstv/12345
- https://t.me/osintlive
- https://t.me/GeoPWatch
- https://t.me/wfwitness