Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi arrived in Moscow on Monday, 28 April 2026, for a working visit centred on the stalled US-Iran negotiations and the broader regional aftermath of April’s bombing campaign. President Vladimir Putin, in remarks released by the Kremlin, told the Iranian envoy that Russia would do “everything” within its means to assist in securing peace in the Middle East.
The visit follows Iran’s submission of its Hormuz proposal to Washington through Pakistani mediation – an offer that, by Monday, the Trump administration had publicly cooled on. Tehran has now turned to its second principal diplomatic backstop. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov hosted Araghchi for substantive talks; the Kremlin readout described the Russian position as one of full operational support to Iran’s diplomatic track and continued political opposition to renewed Israeli or American strikes.
What “Everything” Means
The Russian commitment is rhetorical until it is operational. In practice, Moscow’s instruments are well-defined – Security Council vetoes, intelligence sharing, S-400 air-defence supply (already deployed in part to Iranian sites), economic backchannels through SWIFT-alternative payment rails, and diplomatic cover at the IAEA Board of Governors. Russia is not in a position to deter US air power directly. It is in a position to make the political and economic cost of a renewed campaign higher than it currently appears in Washington’s calculus.
The Triangulation
Iran is now negotiating, simultaneously, with Washington (through Islamabad), Moscow (in person), and – more quietly – Beijing. The point of the triangulation is not to play the great powers off each other. It is to ensure that any settlement reached with Washington does not stand or fall on Washington’s good faith alone. Tehran’s experience of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, abandoned unilaterally by the United States in 2018, has shaped the architecture of every subsequent Iranian negotiation.
The Optics
The image of an Iranian foreign minister in the Kremlin, three weeks into a US-imposed naval blockade of Iranian ports, is not the optics Washington was working toward. Whether or not the Russian commitment translates into operational outcomes, the diplomatic message has been delivered – Iran is not isolated, and the cost of treating it as such will be paid in the same currencies as Ukraine, Hormuz and the global fertiliser market.




