In private briefings and cautious public remarks, Marco Rubio is signaling a reality far more fragile than the sound bites suggest. Back-channel talks are moving, but only by inches, and every inch is contested. Pakistan’s
sudden emergence as a mediator underscores how unconventional the search for de-escalation has become, with its army chief
preparing to walk a diplomatic tightrope in Tehran.
At the center of it all lies the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway now loaded with political explosives. Iran’s floated
“tolling system” is not just an economic idea; it is a test of will, legitimacy, and leverage over a
fifth of the world’s oil. Rubio’s flat rejection highlights a deeper fear: that even a small concession could normalize
coercion at sea. For now, diplomacy is buying time, not peace—and everyone involved knows the margin for error is vanishing.