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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 175
Wednesday, 24 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 09:31 UTC
  • UTC09:31
  • EDT05:31
  • GMT10:31
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← The MonexusOpinion

Baku stage: Tehran's parliamentary speaker tests the post-war rhetoric in a Muslim-majority legislature

Iran's Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf arrived in Baku on 24 June 2026 for the 20th PUIC conference, framing the gathering as a vehicle to explain the regional order after what Tehran calls the Ramadan war.

Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf arrives in Baku for the 20th PUIC conference, 24 June 2026. PressTV / Iranian Parliament

Iran's parliament speaker, Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, touched down in Baku on the morning of 24 June 2026 to address the 20th session of the Union of Parliaments of the OIC member countries, the parliamentary arm of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation. In a statement carried by Iranian state media on arrival, he framed the gathering as a forum for explaining what Tehran describes as a transformed regional order in the wake of the Ramadan war, an event that, in his telling, has redrawn security assumptions across West Asia and demands a coordinated legislative response rather than another round of communiqués.

The choice of venue matters. Baku is a Muslim-majority capital, an OIC member, and a neighbour with which Iran has had to manage a complex relationship: shared Shia heritage and a long land border, against a recent history of friction over transit, faith networks, and the Karabakh file. A parliamentary summit there gives Tehran a low-risk platform to address dozens of legislatures in a single room, and to do so without the choreographed hostility of a UN Security Council appearance.

What Qalibaf is actually selling

The speaker's pitch, as broadcast by PressTV, is straightforward. The post-Ramadan-war environment, in his framing, requires Muslim-majority parliaments to align legislation on security, trade corridors, and information flows, and to stop leaving the architecture of regional order to foreign ministries and defence ministries alone. The implication is that the legislative track has been underused as an instrument of statecraft, and that legislatures can do political work that executives cannot — slower, broader, harder to delegitimise as the act of one leader. It is, in effect, a procedural argument dressed as a regional one: more resolutions, more standing committees, more inter-parliamentary working groups.

A senior parliamentary delegation in Baku also gives Tehran something concrete to point to at home. The Islamic Republic's domestic audience is accustomed to seeing its top officials in rooms with peers from Riyadh, Ankara, Cairo, and Islamabad, and the PUIC membership list delivers exactly that optic.

The counter-read from outside

The frame that the post-war settlement requires a Muslim-majority legislative coordination carries an obvious counter-weight. Western-allied governments, and a number of Gulf legislatures, would read the same gathering as an effort to consolidate an alternative normative architecture, one in which decisions about regional security are deliberated without the United States, the European Union, or Israel in the room. The two readings are not mutually exclusive, and the same set of handshakes, communiqués, and panel discussions can be cited as evidence of either. That is the awkward core of the exercise.

There is also a more narrowly sceptical line. Parliamentary diplomacy produces text. It rarely produces enforceable commitments. The PUIC has been convening since the early 1990s, and its resolutions on Palestine, on counter-terrorism, and on economic cooperation are well-stocked but lightly enforced. A speaker arguing for the legislative track is, in part, arguing for a track his own institution can actually dominate: parliament, not the foreign ministry, sets the tempo.

The structural picture

What is unfolding in Baku is a familiar feature of post-conflict regional politics, the rapid reactivation of multilateral talking-shops by the parties that came out of the fighting on their own terms. Theatrical legitimacy, of the kind that comes from a packed chamber and a rousing peroration, is in shorter supply than battlefield legitimacy, and it is cheaper to produce. For a state whose hard-power position has been reshaped by the Ramadan war, parliamentary forums in friendly capitals are a sensible investment of senior political time.

The host, Azerbaijan, is not a neutral venue but it is a workable one. Baku has its own reasons to want an OIC-adjacent summit to go well, including its recent history with Tehran over faith and transit, and its longer game of presenting itself as a reliable, Western-connected convenor for the Caucasus and Central Asia. The choreography is delicate, and the Iranian delegation will be aware of it.

What to watch

The test of whether the Baku session produces anything beyond the usual is whether the final communiqué, and any side-meetings Qalibaf holds on the margins, contain specific legislative commitments: joint committee work, a timeline for harmonised positions, named working groups. A speech is free; a workplan costs something.

It is also worth noting what the available reporting does not specify. The exact bilateral meetings on Qalibaf's Baku schedule, any readouts from Azerbaijani hosts, and the text of the speaker's address to the plenary are not yet on the public record in the source material this article is built on. Iranian state media describes the trip in the affirmative register that is its house style, and that framing should be read as one input, not the verdict. The verdict will be the document the conference produces, and the follow-through the legislatures attempt once their speakers fly home.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/presstv/
  • https://t.me/presstv/
  • https://t.me/presstv/
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire