Pak Army Chief leaves for Tehran as peace process picks up pace
May 22, 2026
Islamabad [Pakistan], May 22 : Amid diplomatic pressure in the fragile truce in West Asia, Pakistan's Army Chief, Asim Munir, departed for Tehran on Friday as expectations of a breakthrough between the US and Iran gathered pace, Iran's state-run IRNA news agency reported.
This urgent journey follows immediately after a continuous three-day diplomatic marathon in Tehran conducted by Pakistan's Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi. Having arrived in Iran on an unannounced visit earlier this week, Naqvi has already held meetings with President Masoud Pezeshkian alongside other senior Iranian leaders.
According to Iranian and Pakistani media reports, the discussions focused on detailed proposals to bridge differences between Tehran and Washington, end the ongoing standoff, and explore mechanisms for ensuring long-term regional peace and stability.
The schedule for Munir's arrival in the Iranian capital is exceptionally compressed, unfolding against a backdrop of severe global warnings that have heightened the stakes of the mission.
This rapid regional movement coincides with a major internal realignment of Tehran's own diplomatic core. In a significant restructuring of Tehran's diplomatic apparatus, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baqaei has been appointed as the official spokesperson for the country's active negotiating team, according to authoritative Al Arabiya sources.
The strategic appointment comes as Iran recalibrates its delegation amid critical high-stakes regional and international peace talks. Concurrently, Iran's Speaker of Parliament Mohammad Baqer Ghalibaf has been reappointed to lead the diplomatic delegation, according to the same Al Arabiya sources.
The decision to retain the influential Iranian Parliament Speaker at the helm underscores Tehran's intent to maintain political continuity and heavyweight legislative backing at the negotiating table. These administrative shuffles within the delegation signal a coordinated effort by the Iranian establishment to streamline its communications and strategic leverage during the ongoing diplomatic maneuvers.
These internal reconfigurations have become critical as the deadline for a breakthrough narrows under intense pressure from Washington. On Wednesday, US President Donald Trump cautioned that the window for active diplomacy had arrived at a perilous "borderline" between a formal peace memo and an immediate, catastrophic escalation. Furthermore, the White House has consistently sustained immense rhetorical pressure, warning of unprecedented military consequences if the current backchannel format fails to produce a satisfactory "piece of paper".
Compounding the crisis, internal dynamics in Iran remain highly combative, directly threatening to derail the prospects of an imminent deal and complicating the specific environment the incoming intermediaries are stepping into. Simultaneously, hardline factions within Tehran's legislative assembly have accused Washington of exploiting the temporary pause in hostilities to regroup, threatening a "forceful response" that would expand the conflict far beyond West Asia.
By stepping directly into this deadlock, Munir is attempting to navigate a crisis where very few global actors are simultaneously engaged by the Trump administration and the Iranian high command.