Iran’s leadership includes factions that oppose negotiations with the United States, but analysts say those divisions have not yet been strong enough to stop the current bargaining process. After a five-week war was paused by an April ceasefire and later ended by an accord earlier this month, US Vice President JD Vance meets with Iran’s top negotiator Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf in Switzerland. Qatar and Pakistan mediate the effort toward a final agreement.

Reporting from both outlets describes visible dissent inside Iran, including public protests against the talks in Mashhad and remarks by Iranian officials suggesting skepticism among some hardline figures. Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei is reported to have approved the deal while expressing a different view and calling for “face-to-face” talks. Meanwhile, Iranian negotiators Abbas Araghchi and Ghalibaf present the talks as consistent with defending Iranian interests and avoid staging actions that could be seen as symbolic concessions.

The discussion also highlights external pressure: Iran’s strategic leverage through the Strait of Hormuz and Trump’s warning of new military action if talks fail. Analysts characterize current Iranian factional dynamics as disrupted and cautious, with pragmatists able to proceed while hardliners lack sufficient institutional control to change the trajectory immediately.