Just months after suffering the most widespread assassination campaign in modern history, Iran’s leadership has reemerged in the public sphere, showcasing its new confidence with international visits.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian made his first trip abroad since the war began in late February on Tuesday, landing in Pakistan with Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and a delegation. The trip appeared to be less than urgent, with both sides portraying it as a ceremonial visit to voice Tehran’s gratitude for help in peace negotiations, but not broaching any new topics. Its lack of urgency showcases Iranian leaders’ newfound comfort in being protected from new assassination attempts.
Press statements from both sides glowed over the visit, with President Asif Ali Zardari’s office saying the visit “reflects the longstanding brotherly relations between the two countries and a desire to stay together in good and bad times.”
“The President reaffirmed Pakistan’s principled support for Iran’s peace, stability, national unity, sovereignty and territorial integrity. He stated that Pakistan has consistently opposed one-sided initiatives and has supported dialogue and diplomacy as the means to achieve a durable and sustainable solution to regional and global challenges,” the president’s office said, adding that Pakistan was committed to “preserving the unity of the Muslim Ummah,” meaning the Muslim community.
Notably, the office of President Asif Ali Zardari said he voiced his condolences for the “martyrdom” of former Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Pezeshkian beamed as he was greeted by an F-16 flyover — the Pakistani Air Force’s version of some of the jets that bombed Iran just four months ago.
Iran was accused of flying some aircraft into Pakistan to hold them there for the duration of Operation Epic Fury/Rising Lion, confident the U.S. wouldn’t launch strikes against its longtime ally.
While the visit is the Iranian president’s first since the ceasefire, other top officials have been flying all over. Iranian Parliamentary Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf traveled to Islamabad, Pakistan, on April 11; Doha, Qatar, in mid to late May; and Switzerland over the weekend.
claimed in an interview with Al-Mayadeen English that the delegation’s plane had to be diverted and make an emergency landing in an eastern city in Iran as it made its return flight, after intelligence was obtained suggesting the plane would be shot down. The delegation then returned to Tehran by car or train.
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No Western outlets have confirmed the claim.
Despite the new visibility, the trip locations also indicate a degree of cautiousness. Every country visited by top Iranian officials so far has either been close, friendly, or the site of neutral negotiations, where an assassination attempt would spark international condemnation. Tehran will likely have to wait some time before its leaders can return to their past travel routine.