Iran Prioritizes Doha Diplomacy, Vows War Readiness
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- Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf told Iranian state television on June 30, 2026 that Iran "is pursuing dialogue, but if the dialogue is not implemented, we are also prepared for war," as Iranian and US delegations held separate discussions in Doha.
- Iran will not enter further negotiations until conditions of its signed MoU are fulfilled, Ghalibaf said, while declaring joint sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz with Oman and vowing never to compromise on rights there.
- President Masoud Pezeshkian briefed PM Narendra Modi by phone on West Asia developments, with $6 billion in Iranian frozen assets in Qatar slated for release as US talks proceed.
- Modi told Pezeshkian that freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz is critical for India and the world, inserting New Delhi as an active diplomatic stakeholder in the Doha track.
- The US delegation held parallel Doha meetings; Trump described those sessions as "very good," while Vance said Trump won't return the US to full war in Iran "unless he has to," a restraint framing absent from Tehran's public posture.
- The Strait of Hormuz emerged as a non-negotiable Iranian red line, with Ghalibaf warning that any infringement will draw a proportionate response — a position both India and the broader energy-importing world now have to factor into escalation math.
Why it matters: Iran is publicly gating further diplomacy on fulfillment of already-signed MoU terms and treating Strait of Hormuz sovereignty as non-negotiable, while the US side is framing the same Doha meetings as productive. Modi's direct line to Pezeshkian adds an Indian diplomatic weight to a chokepoint that carries a stated Indian economic interest, with $6 billion in frozen Iranian assets still in escrow pending the outcome.



