NEED TO KNOW
- White House claims direct talks; Iran says no US contact will occur
- Over 500 million barrels lost from global market since February
- Neither delegation carries authority to sign a binding agreement
WASHINGTON, DC (TDR) — Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are headed to Islamabad this weekend for a second round of Iran talks Tehran says will not happen.
The big picture: The gap between what Washington is announcing and what Tehran is denying is the entire story — and it points to a diplomatic process running on Pakistani shuttle messaging, not direct negotiation.
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- White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt framed the trip as "direct talks"
- Iran's Tasnim and Nournews — both tied to Tehran's security apparatus — say no US meeting is planned
Why it matters: The economic stakes of the standoff are no longer abstract. They are showing up at gas pumps, grocery stores, and pharmacy counters worldwide.
- Kpler data shows more than 500 million barrels of crude knocked out of the global market — the largest supply disruption in modern history
- Rystad Energy estimates oil flows will not approach 90% of prewar levels until July at the earliest
Driving the news: The trip itself was delayed once already this week, and the contradictory signaling from both capitals tracks a familiar pattern from the failed April 12 round.
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- Witkoff and Kushner now expected in Pakistan Sunday, not Saturday
- Iran FM Abbas Araghchi is in Islamabad meeting Pakistani officials, not Americans
- The first round under VP JD Vance collapsed over Washington's demand for a 20-year uranium enrichment pause; Tehran offered five
- President Donald Trump told Reuters Iran "will be making an offer," details unknown
What they're saying: Public statements from both sides describe two different realities — and the contradiction itself is the diplomatic data point.
- Karoline Leavitt, White House Press Secretary — "The Iranians reached out and asked for an in-person conversation."
- Iranian state-affiliated outlets reported Araghchi will not speak with US officials during the visit
- Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Iranian Parliament Speaker — "Reopening the Strait of Hormuz is impossible" while the US blockade holds
Yes, but: The administration's framing skips a structural problem neither side will name plainly.
- Neither delegation is publicly authorized to sign a binding deal
- Witkoff and Kushner are envoys reporting back to Trump; Araghchi reports to Supreme Leader Khamenei
- A handshake in Islamabad cannot end the US naval blockade of Iranian ports without sign-off neither team carries
Between the lines: Both governments need the appearance of progress more than they need a deal. Pakistan provides the venue precisely because messages can be passed without either capital admitting it blinked first.
- Leavitt's "direct talks" framing serves a domestic audience that wants Trump dealmaking; Tehran's denial serves a domestic audience that rejects negotiating under blockade
- The shuttle structure lets both leaders claim they never conceded
- An "offer" arriving through Pakistani intermediaries is not the same as a negotiated agreement
What's next:
- Witkoff and Kushner expected in Islamabad Sunday
- Trump's extended ceasefire holds for now; US naval blockade remains
- IMF warned global growth will take a hit even if ceasefire holds
- Lebanon ceasefire extended three weeks; Israeli strikes continue
If a deal can only be reached by letting both leaders claim they never negotiated, what happens to the ceasefire the moment one of them needs a different domestic story?
Sources
This report was compiled using information from CNN, CNBC, CNBC reporting on the Strait of Hormuz crisis, and Al Jazeera.
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