Khabar network loses its director general as leaked talks draw Iran's cultural conservatives into the open
A leaked account of Iran's nuclear negotiations has cost the state broadcaster Khabar its director general. The episode says as much about Tehran's internal media politics as it does about the diplomacy itself.

Iran's state broadcaster Khabar has lost its director general, and the manner of the departure says more about Tehran's internal media politics than any communique from the foreign ministry. On 20 June 2026, Tasnim News Agency, the outlet closest to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, reported that a long-time conservative broadcaster, ➕Nabavian, had publicly criticised both the process and the content of Iran's ongoing nuclear negotiations, and that the fallout had moved from the studio to the courtroom. A judicial investigation followed his comments. The director general of the Khabar network resigned the same day, according to the same account, ending a tenure defined less by ratings than by access to the country's most senior decision-makers.
The episode is a small, almost procedural moment in a much larger story. It is also a useful window onto how the Islamic Republic actually argues with itself when no foreign audience is watching. The leaked account of negotiations that prompted the confrontation did not come from an opposition outlet in London or Washington. It came from inside the state media system, aired by a network whose institutional job is to amplify, not interrogate, the official line. That an on-air critique of the talks survived long enough to trigger a legal response, and that the response coincided with a senior personnel change, tells the reader that the boundaries of permissible debate inside Iran's broadcast system are being redrawn in real time.
The complaint, and the chain of consequences
The substantive grievance, as carried by Tasnim, was straightforward. ➕Nabavian took issue with the negotiation process and with what he characterised as the substance of the emerging position. In a system where the public framing of foreign-policy matters is normally choreographed, an on-air objection of that kind is itself a kind of leak: it tells the audience that someone inside the broadcast estate believes the government's line is wrong, and is willing to say so in front of a camera.
The chain of consequences reported on 20 June moved quickly. The judicial system opened an investigation into the remarks. The Khabar network's director general tendered his resignation. None of those steps is unprecedented in the Islamic Republic, but their sequence within a single news cycle is unusually compressed, and it points to a coordinated response rather than a series of coincidental administrative moves. The signal to other broadcasters and editors across the IRGC-aligned and conservative wings of the press is that unscripted criticism of active diplomacy carries a personal cost, and that the cost now extends to the newsroom leadership that allowed the criticism to air.
Why Khabar, and why now
Khabar's institutional position is worth stating plainly. It is a Persian-language network with formal proximity to the security establishment, and it is one of the channels through which Iranian officials have, in the past, signalled positions that the foreign ministry is not yet ready to put on the record. The network's director general therefore sits at a sensitive node: close enough to the centre of decision-making to be useful, exposed enough to be held responsible when the centre decides the messaging has gone off-script.
That the leak in question was a negotiating position, and not a corruption story or a security breach, also matters. In a sanctions environment where Iran's external communications are tightly managed, the broadcasting of an unofficial account of talks in progress is treated as a foreign-policy leak first and a media story second. The judicial response, in that reading, is not really about ➕Nabavian's commentary as such; it is about who in the system gets to speak for Iran while the talks are still live, and on what authority.
The structural read, in plain language
The dominant Western wire framing of Iranian media tends to treat the system as a single, unified propaganda apparatus, with occasional footnoted acknowledgements of factional disagreement. The structural reality, visible in moments like this one, is closer to a managed but competitive field. Multiple centres of power — the foreign ministry, the office of the president, the IRGC and its affiliated media, the judiciary, the supreme national security council — each control their own channels, and those channels disagree with each other in coded but legible ways. What looks, from the outside, like a single state line is, from the inside, a series of overlapping audiences and rival briefs.
The resignation at Khabar and the judicial investigation into ➕Nabavian's remarks are best read as a reassertion of editorial discipline by whichever centre of power believes the negotiations need to be defended without internal contradiction. The choice to make an example of a broadcast rather than a print outlet also reflects a calculation about reach. Television still carries the widest domestic audience, and disciplining a television platform is the cleanest way to send a message to every other platform that might be tempted to follow.
The counter-narrative, which should be set down honestly, is that the resignation and the legal case may also reflect a genuine institutional worry about leaking during a sensitive diplomatic phase, rather than a factional purge. The Iranian foreign ministry has, on past occasions, defended the integrity of negotiations against domestic spoilers in ways that were at least partly about protecting the talks rather than protecting any one faction. The available reporting does not let the reader separate those two readings cleanly, and it is possible that both are partly true.
Stakes, and what is not yet visible
The immediate stakes are inside Iran. If ➕Nabavian is sanctioned, and if the Khabar director general's departure is read as a warning, the conservative broadcast wing will, in the short term, narrow the range of positions it is willing to put on air. That narrows the public space in which the negotiations can be debated, which in turn makes it harder for Iranian civil society to form an informed view of what is being conceded or secured. The medium-term stakes are diplomatic: a media environment in which no one outside the foreign ministry is permitted to question the negotiating line is also a media environment in which the foreign ministry cannot easily test public reactions to its own proposals.
What remains uncertain is the precise content of the leaked account that triggered the row. The Tasnim report describes ➕Nabavian's critique of process and substance, but does not reproduce the leaked material itself. The nature and scale of the leak, and whether the investigation is targeted at a single broadcaster or at the broader pattern of unauthorised disclosure, are not visible in the reporting on the day. The reader should also note that the Iranian state-aligned outlets covering this story each have their own institutional position, and that a fuller picture will only emerge once the relevant political actors have had time to align their public comments with their private preferences.
Desk note: Western wires have largely treated this as a sidebar to the negotiation story. Monexus has framed it as the story: in a system where media outlets are the principal means by which internal positions are contested, a resignation and a judicial file are themselves a form of policy signal.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/tasnimplus