A May 4 missile strike on Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport by Yemen’s Houthi rebels does not appear to have significantly disrupted ongoing U.S.-Iranian diplomatic engagement, contrary to concerns voiced by reformist media outlets in Iran. This, in part, lends credence to the strategic calculus advanced by segments of the Iranian foreign policy elite who argued that calibrated use of force can serve as a means of coercive diplomacy to enhance Iran’s bargaining leverage.
- May 5: The reformist Ham-Mihan contextualized the Houthi missile strike within the broader framework of nuclear negotiations, asserting:
- “The impact of the missile strike on U.S.-Iran nuclear talks renders the situation acutely sensitive. While negotiations had seen modest momentum, recent developments suggest renewed vulnerability, with Israeli actors seizing any opportunity to derail the diplomatic track between Tehran and Washington. The attack on Ben Gurion Airport serves as a pretext for such sabotage.”
- May 5: In response, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-affiliated Mashregh News issued a rebuttal, framing Ham-Mihan’s analysis as ideologically and strategically flawed:
- “Once again, the reformist press aligns itself with Western narratives by attributing the autonomous decisions of the Yemeni resistance to Tehran. More troubling is the conditional logic that ties the success of indirect U.S.-Iran negotiations to the security imperatives of the Zionist entity. Why does Ham-Mihan employ Zionist terminology, and why does it, like Israel, lament a strategic blow delivered by the Yemeni axis of resistance?”
- May 5: Hard-line Kayhan, via its satire column, caricatured Ham-Mihan as “swooning into the embrace of America and Israel.”
- May 6: Ham-Mihan columnist Ahmad Zeidabadi responded, defending the newspaper’s editorial stance:
- “These guys behave as if possessed by evil spirits. They either don’t read our commentary or lack the cognitive capacity to grasp its content … More likely, they oppose negotiations with the United States in principle but, unable to declare this openly, redirect their opposition toward Ham-Mihan … It was not Ham-Mihan, however, that initiated engagement with Washington.”
- May 6: National security analyst Mehdi Kharatian, in an open letter addressed to Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and disseminated via X, advocated for targeting international oil shipments to persuade the United States of Iran’s ability to disrupt international energy transportation.
- May 6: Mashregh News claimed U.S.-Iran negotiations were postponed due to “conflicts within the U.S. administration,” pointing at public disagreements between Donald Trump Jr. and the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
- May 7: Former Supreme National Security Council Secretary Ali Shamkhani, on X, expressed optimism concerning resumption of the negotiations:
- “Washington has finally accepted the assessments of” the International Atomic Energy Agency “and its own intelligence agencies that Iran does not possess a nuclear weapon. Both parties are determined to continue the correct path of negotiations. The complete removal of sanctions and recognizing Iran’s right to industrial-scale enrichment bring an agreement within reach.”
- May 7: In an implicit rebuttal to Shamkhani on X, Mohammad-Hossein Ranjbaran, a media advisor to the foreign minister, cautioned against unauthorized disclosures:
- “Institutions and respected officials who are privy to classified intelligence must adhere to protocol and avoid disseminating sensitive information through affiliated media channels.”