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The Farda Briefing

US President Donald Trump (left) meets Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman at the White House in Washington on November 18.
US President Donald Trump (left) meets Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman at the White House in Washington on November 18.

Welcome back to The Farda Briefing, an RFE/RL newsletter that tracks the key issues in Iran and explains why they matter.

I'm RFE/RL correspondent Kian Sharifi. In this edition, I'm looking at speculation about the Saudis facilitating talks between Tehran and Washington over Iran's nuclear program.

What You Need To Know

Saudi Mediation Role Back In The Spotlight: Nine months after reports first emerged that Saudi Arabia is interested in facilitating talks between the United States and Iran, Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman’s trip to Washington has again put Riyadh’s potential for mediation in the spotlight.

Family Says Iran Detains 70-Year-Old US Citizen: Iranian-American dual citizen Afarin Mohajer has been detained in Tehran in what her son, US-based political activist Reza Zarrabi, describers as a “kidnapping.” Speaking to RFE/RL’s Radio Farda, Zarrabi said his 70-year-old mother was arrested on a slew of charges, including “propaganda against the establishment” and “forming an opposition group.” He insisted that Mohajer was detained because of his activism and added that she “has had no political activities.”

Tehran Voids Cairo Agreement After IAEA Resolution: Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi this week said a technical agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which was signed in Cairo in September, was terminated after the IAEA Board of Governors passed a resolution pressing Iran to clarify the status of its enriched uranium stockpile. Iran says its roughly 400 kilograms of highly enriched uranium is buried in facilities that were struck by the United States in June.

The Big Issue

This image taken in February 2007 shows a technician at the uranium conversion facility in Isfahan, which was bombed by the United States in June 2025.
This image taken in February 2007 shows a technician at the uranium conversion facility in Isfahan, which was bombed by the United States in June 2025.

The Riyadh Route

Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman’s November 18 visit to the White House -- his first in seven years -- has sparked widespread speculation about Saudi Arabia offering to facilitate dialogue between Washington and Tehran on nuclear negotiations.

Hosting bin Salman, US President Donald Trump said he is “open” to a deal with Iran, which he said wanted an agreement “very badly.”

Saudi Arabia’s de facto leader, meanwhile, talked up his country’s “close” relations with the United States and said Riyadh “will do our best” to make an agreement with Iran happen.

A day before the trip, Iranian President Masud Pezeshkian sent a letter to bin Salman that led many to believe he was relaying a message to Trump. Iran's government has formally dismissed the speculation, insisting that the letter focuses on “bilateral” relations. But the timing is curious.

Why It Matters: Saudi Arabia has strong incentives to pursue this mediation role, particularly now that Iran's proxy network has been weakened.

The kingdom is concerned that a cornered Iran might accelerate nuclear weapons development, and Riyadh sees a new nuclear agreement as preventing that scenario.

Additionally, Saudi foreign policy has pivoted toward prioritizing economic objectives, and further regional instability would hinder these goals. By positioning itself as a mediator, Saudi Arabia can subtly distance itself from Trump's maximum pressure strategy against Tehran while maintaining its strategic alliance with Washington.

Crucially, Riyadh and Washington signed an initial agreement that serves as a precursor to a deal on the transfer of American civil nuclear technology to Saudi Arabia.

By securing its own nuclear cooperation pathway with the United States, Riyadh can afford to support measured negotiations that give Iran limited enrichment under tight inspection regimes --so long as the kingdom receives equivalent rights.

What's Being Said: Oman and Qatar have traditionally served as mediators between Iran and the United States, but some, including former Iranian diplomat Hamid Abutalebi, believe it is time to let the Saudis facilitate talks.

In a message to Pezeshkian, Abutalebi said the government is “facing a historic responsibility” and must seize “this strategic opportunity” to ease economic pressures, bring stability to the Middle East, and “pave the way for a return to sustainable equilibrium with America and Saudi Arabia.”

Middle East analyst Bahman Akbari argued that Saudi Arabia's strengthened ties with Washington through the preliminary nuclear agreement and defense partnership with the United States don't prevent -- and may actually enable -- its role as a credible intermediary between Tehran and Washington.

“Saudi Arabia's potential as a mediator…creates the possibility of reaching a significant agreement,” he told the Reformist newspaper Etemad.

Meanwhile, Kamal Kharrazi, head of Iran’s Strategic Council on Foreign Relations and senior adviser to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, told CNN this week that Tehran is open to talks with Washington, but that Iran would not negotiate over its missile program.

“They have to make the first move,” Kharrazi said. “It is only the nuclear issue we will discuss with the United States.”

That's all from me for now.

Until next time,

Kian Sharifi

If you enjoyed this briefing and don't want to miss the next edition, subscribe here. It will be sent to your inbox every Friday.

View of drones at an underground site at an undisclosed location in Iran, in this handout image from May 2022
View of drones at an underground site at an undisclosed location in Iran, in this handout image from May 2022

Welcome back to The Farda Briefing, an RFE/RL newsletter that tracks the key issues in Iran and explains why they matter.

I'm RFE/RL correspondent Kian Sharifi. In this edition, I’m looking at how a promotional video by a private contractor in Iran may have inadvertently revealed the construction of a subterranean military base.

What You Need To Know

Op-Sec Failure: An Iranian civilian contractor that specializes in manufacturing blast-resistant doors posted promotional videos on social media that inadvertently revealed multiple fortified tunnel construction projects apparently linked to Iran's army.

Water Crisis Becoming Critical: Iran is facing a severe water crisis caused by years of mismanagement and drought, forcing authorities to ration water in Tehran. Iranian President Masud Pezeshkian has warned that parts of the city may need to be evacuated or the capital relocated. Kaveh Madani, director of the Canadian-based United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment, and Health, has told RFE/RL’s Radio Farda that the warnings by the authorities didn't go far enough. Have a look at satellite images of key lakes and reservoirs across Iran to see the extent of the country's crippling drought crisis.

Iran Ramps Up Construction At Underground Nuclear Facility: Satellite images reveal that while Iran’s previously targeted nuclear sites remain inactive, construction has ramped up at a new underground facility near Natanz. Experts say the site, buried beneath Pickaxe Mountain, was initially intended for centrifuge assembly but may now be part of a broader nuclear project. Radio Farda spoke with Joseph Rodgers of the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), who analyzed the images.

The Big Issue

Iran's then-army chief, Abdolrahim Mousavi (left), and slain armed forces chief of staff, Mohammad Baqeri, visit an underground site with drones at an undisclosed location in Iran in 2022.
Iran's then-army chief, Abdolrahim Mousavi (left), and slain armed forces chief of staff, Mohammad Baqeri, visit an underground site with drones at an undisclosed location in Iran in 2022.

Instagram Op-Sec Fail

The contractor's videos on Instagram showcased the installation of reinforced tunnel doors, blast-proof chambers, and underground storage facilities designed to withstand aerial or missile strikes.

The footage appeared to depict entrances to tunnels that open-source analysts believe are large enough to house drones or serve as munitions storage facilities.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), which has for years boasted about its underground “missile cities,” was quick to deny any links to the facilities. A close inspection of the videos, however, reveals the insignia of the army -- not the IRGC -- on a banner installed in the tunnels.

Why It Matters: These types of hardened underground facilities are commonly associated with Iran's ballistic missile and drone programs, as well as protection systems for key military assets.

The inadvertent disclosure offers a rare public glimpse into Iran's expanding network of fortified military infrastructure -- information that would normally be closely guarded.

The timing is particularly sensitive given the heightened regional tensions and recent strikes on Iranian facilities.

Iran has been investing heavily in underground facilities to protect strategic assets from potential Israeli or US airstrikes, including sites for drone and missile production.

The contractor's social-media promotion essentially handed intelligence analysts detailed views of construction techniques, door specifications, and facility layouts that would normally require extensive covert intelligence gathering.

What's Being Said: The videos sparked immediate debate within Iran about security vulnerabilities and operational security failures. But aside from the IRGC statement distancing itself from the breach, there has been no official comment -- not even from the army.

On X, questions were raised about the apparent lapse in security, with some attributing it to “rampant corruption”.

Others, including military commentators, wondered if the new blast-resistant doors are really strong enough to do what they’re supposed to.

That's all from me for now.

Until next time,

Kian Sharifi

If you enjoyed this briefing and don't want to miss the next edition, subscribe here. It will be sent to your inbox every Friday.

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