Sign in
Edition of 10:00 CETThursday, July 16, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages608 briefings today
Geopolitics & PoliticsWednesday, July 1, 2026

Vance and Rubio Forge Rival Diplomatic Tracks on Iran and Lebanon

The US vice president and secretary of state pursue divergent Middle East strategies, exposing internal administration tensions and drawing sharp reactions from Tehran, Beirut, and Jerusalem.

Two competing diplomatic frameworks have emerged from the Trump administration, one led by Vice President JD Vance on Iran and the other by Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Lebanon, with immediate and contradictory consequences on the ground. The Vance-negotiated memorandum, signed with Iran in Islamabad and advanced in Switzerland, includes a clause demanding Israel’s full withdrawal from Lebanon. The Rubio-brokered Lebanon agreement, by contrast, contains a secret annex—published by Israeli media—that grants the Israeli military freedom of action in a southern security zone and a monitoring role over Hezbollah’s disarmament, while referring only to a “redeployment” rather than a withdrawal. In Beirut, Parliament Speaker Nabih Berry, who also leads the Hezbollah-allied Amal movement, has rejected the Rubio framework as “contradictory and impossible to apply,” warning it could lead to the “balkanization” of Lebanon. Hezbollah itself has stated that the Lebanese government surrendered to US pressure, effectively trampling the first clause of the Vance memorandum.

Viewed from Washington, the division reflects both policy substance and the 2028 presidential ambitions of the two men. White House and State Department spokespeople insist there is “one camp—President Trump’s camp,” but administration officials, speaking anonymously, confirm that Rubio was so sceptical of securing an acceptable Iran deal that he declined to head the US delegation. Vance then asked Trump twice for the lead role and was granted it. The vice president’s camp includes envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, while Rubio works closely with Ron Dermer, a senior Israeli strategist reinstated by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to front the Lebanon negotiations. Analysts in Washington note that Vance has repeatedly criticised Israeli actions in Lebanon for complicating Iran talks, whereas Rubio has remained publicly supportive of Israel. Trump’s semi-joking remark that he would blame Vance if the Iran talks fail is interpreted by some former diplomats as setting the vice president up for failure.

In Tehran, the clerical establishment has moved to constrain its negotiators. The Assembly of Experts—a body that constitutionally outranks the presidency, parliament, and foreign ministry—issued a public admonition signed by 68 of its 88 members, instructing President Masoud Pezeshkian, parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi to adhere strictly to ten red lines defined by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Russian foreign policy circles, cited in regional media, warn that Washington is using the memorandum of understanding as a trap to buy time and reorganise the battlefield, a view echoed by Brussels-based analyst Elijah Magnier, who argues the US has transformed the MoU into a “pressure machine.”

The two tracks now operate on a collision course. The Iran truce remains fragile, tested by repeated exchanges of fire in recent days, while the Lebanon agreement faces implementation hurdles amid domestic opposition and Iranian pressure. The Vance memorandum’s call for a full Israeli withdrawal stands in direct contradiction to the Rubio framework’s provisions for an ongoing Israeli security role. No formal next steps have been announced, but the competing processes are expected to intersect as both dossiers advance, with the potential to either reinforce or unravel each other depending on how the internal administration dynamics are resolved.

Divergence — who tells it how
Axis: Sovranità vs. Stabilità
40%Medium
2 blocs · positions from −0.60 to +0.20
Resistenza e sovranitàStabilità e diplomazia
GLFALM
Divergence between press blocs
Arab Gulf press+0.20neutral
Arab Levant-Maghreb press−0.60critical
US press blocs are not represented in this cluster; the analysis reflects only regional perspectives from the Gulf and Levant.
Arab Gulf press+0.20
Voice

The US is wisely pursuing a dual-track approach that balances deterrence with diplomacy, and the Gulf states are ready to support this calibrated strategy.

Mechanismpragmatismo mediatore

By presenting the two memorandums as complementary rather than contradictory, the narrative normalizes US involvement and positions Gulf mediators as indispensable partners.

Omission

The bloc omits the US military buildup in the region and the ongoing Israeli violations of Palestinian rights, which would complicate the positive framing of US policy.

PragmatismDetachment
Arab Levant-Maghreb press−0.60
Voice

The US and Israel are colluding to impose a new colonial order, and the resistance will not surrender its weapons or its rights.

Mechanismvittimizzazione resistenziale

The narrative uses a 'two faces of the same coin' rhetorical device to delegitimize any US diplomatic initiative as inherently hostile, thereby justifying continued armed resistance.

Omission

The bloc omits the Iranian nuclear program and the role of Hezbollah in regional instability, which would weaken the victimhood narrative.

OutrageVictimhoodRevanchism

Broaden your view

Read more
Breaking
Tehran Erects ‘We Will Kill Trump’ Mural as US Strikes Intensify and Iraq’s Premier Visits Washington·Argentina's Late Surge Sets Up Historic World Cup Final Against Spain·Netanyahu postpones Washington trip after Graham funeral rescheduled, wider tensions surface·The 'negrita' who became a silver-screen goddess: Elsa Aguirre dies at 95·Pakistan Urges US and Iran to Revive Hormuz Talks as Fighting Enters Sixth Day·Russian Missiles Kill Two in Kyiv as EU and UK Pledge Deeper Defence Cooperation·Ukraine Installs Energy Chief as Premier Amid Wartime Reshuffle and Street Protests·Argentina's Late Winner Turns Pickford's Penalty Cheat Sheet into a Memento·Tehran Erects ‘We Will Kill Trump’ Mural as US Strikes Intensify and Iraq’s Premier Visits Washington·Argentina's Late Surge Sets Up Historic World Cup Final Against Spain·Netanyahu postpones Washington trip after Graham funeral rescheduled, wider tensions surface·The 'negrita' who became a silver-screen goddess: Elsa Aguirre dies at 95·Pakistan Urges US and Iran to Revive Hormuz Talks as Fighting Enters Sixth Day·Russian Missiles Kill Two in Kyiv as EU and UK Pledge Deeper Defence Cooperation·Ukraine Installs Energy Chief as Premier Amid Wartime Reshuffle and Street Protests·Argentina's Late Winner Turns Pickford's Penalty Cheat Sheet into a Memento·
Upd. 12:15 PM3 languages · 5 outlets
PreviousGeopolitics & PoliticsNext
5 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Vance and Rubio Forge Rival Diplomatic Tracks on Iran and Lebanon

The US vice president and secretary of state pursue divergent Middle East strategies, exposing internal administration tensions and drawing sharp reactions from Tehran, Beirut, and Jerusalem.

Two competing diplomatic frameworks have emerged from the Trump administration, one led by Vice President JD Vance on Iran and the other by Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Lebanon, with immediate and contradictory consequences on the ground. The Vance-negotiated memorandum, signed with Iran in Islamabad and advanced in Switzerland, includes a clause demanding Israel’s full withdrawal from Lebanon. The Rubio-brokered Lebanon agreement, by contrast, contains a secret annex—published by Israeli media—that grants the Israeli military freedom of action in a southern security zone and a monitoring role over Hezbollah’s disarmament, while referring only to a “redeployment” rather than a withdrawal. In Beirut, Parliament Speaker Nabih Berry, who also leads the Hezbollah-allied Amal movement, has rejected the Rubio framework as “contradictory and impossible to apply,” warning it could lead to the “balkanization” of Lebanon. Hezbollah itself has stated that the Lebanese government surrendered to US pressure, effectively trampling the first clause of the Vance memorandum.

Viewed from Washington, the division reflects both policy substance and the 2028 presidential ambitions of the two men. White House and State Department spokespeople insist there is “one camp—President Trump’s camp,” but administration officials, speaking anonymously, confirm that Rubio was so sceptical of securing an acceptable Iran deal that he declined to head the US delegation. Vance then asked Trump twice for the lead role and was granted it. The vice president’s camp includes envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, while Rubio works closely with Ron Dermer, a senior Israeli strategist reinstated by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to front the Lebanon negotiations. Analysts in Washington note that Vance has repeatedly criticised Israeli actions in Lebanon for complicating Iran talks, whereas Rubio has remained publicly supportive of Israel. Trump’s semi-joking remark that he would blame Vance if the Iran talks fail is interpreted by some former diplomats as setting the vice president up for failure.

In Tehran, the clerical establishment has moved to constrain its negotiators. The Assembly of Experts—a body that constitutionally outranks the presidency, parliament, and foreign ministry—issued a public admonition signed by 68 of its 88 members, instructing President Masoud Pezeshkian, parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi to adhere strictly to ten red lines defined by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Russian foreign policy circles, cited in regional media, warn that Washington is using the memorandum of understanding as a trap to buy time and reorganise the battlefield, a view echoed by Brussels-based analyst Elijah Magnier, who argues the US has transformed the MoU into a “pressure machine.”

The two tracks now operate on a collision course. The Iran truce remains fragile, tested by repeated exchanges of fire in recent days, while the Lebanon agreement faces implementation hurdles amid domestic opposition and Iranian pressure. The Vance memorandum’s call for a full Israeli withdrawal stands in direct contradiction to the Rubio framework’s provisions for an ongoing Israeli security role. No formal next steps have been announced, but the competing processes are expected to intersect as both dossiers advance, with the potential to either reinforce or unravel each other depending on how the internal administration dynamics are resolved.

Divergence — who tells it how
Axis: Sovranità vs. Stabilità
40%Medium
2 blocs · positions from −0.60 to +0.20
Resistenza e sovranitàStabilità e diplomazia
GLFALM
Divergence between press blocs
Arab Gulf press+0.20neutral
Arab Levant-Maghreb press−0.60critical
US press blocs are not represented in this cluster; the analysis reflects only regional perspectives from the Gulf and Levant.
Arab Gulf press+0.20
Voice

The US is wisely pursuing a dual-track approach that balances deterrence with diplomacy, and the Gulf states are ready to support this calibrated strategy.

Mechanismpragmatismo mediatore

By presenting the two memorandums as complementary rather than contradictory, the narrative normalizes US involvement and positions Gulf mediators as indispensable partners.

Omission

The bloc omits the US military buildup in the region and the ongoing Israeli violations of Palestinian rights, which would complicate the positive framing of US policy.

PragmatismDetachment
Arab Levant-Maghreb press−0.60
Voice

The US and Israel are colluding to impose a new colonial order, and the resistance will not surrender its weapons or its rights.

Mechanismvittimizzazione resistenziale

The narrative uses a 'two faces of the same coin' rhetorical device to delegitimize any US diplomatic initiative as inherently hostile, thereby justifying continued armed resistance.

Omission

The bloc omits the Iranian nuclear program and the role of Hezbollah in regional instability, which would weaken the victimhood narrative.

OutrageVictimhoodRevanchism

This story appeared in

5 outlets · 3 languages

Broaden your view

From Economy & Markets

US hits Brazil with 25% tariffs, triggering retaliation threat and political clash

6 languages · 24 outlets

From Technology

NASA astronaut Anil Menon begins eight-month ISS mission aboard Russian Soyuz

3 languages · 9 outlets

From Science & Health

First true sugar detected in interstellar space, as deep-time studies reshape origins debate

4 languages · 5 outlets

Read more