Vice President JD Vance departed for Pakistan on Friday as part of an important assignment given to him by President Donald Trump: to “lead” the U.S. negotiations with Iran to convince them to re-open a critical trade waterway, an assignment that one foreign policy scholar warned could jeopardize his presidential ambitions.
Vance departed to Pakistan on Friday alongside Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law, to meet with Iranian officials in the hopes of reaching an agreement to bring about an end to the war. However, Vance – who has publicly opposed a U.S. war with Iran in the past – could become politically tied to the conflict if the talks fail to produce an agreement.

“This reduces any opportunity he might have to distance himself from the policy if he’s going to be the lead negotiator,” said Philip Gordon, an international relations scholar and former national security advisor to Vice President Kamala Harris, speaking with The New York Times in its report Friday.
Vance has walked something of a “tightrope” in the leadup to Trump’s war against Iran, balancing his rhetoric between opposition and support for the conflict, and losing “clout within the White House because of his dissent,” an unnamed White House official told MS NOW in its report Friday.
The vice president has also been widely seen as a potential GOP presidential candidate in 2028, though his election prospects may hinge on managing the “delicate balancing act” of negotiating an end to a war he’s frequently objected to, the Times reported.
“For Mr. Vance, the elevated role could bolster but also complicate his political future,” the Times report reads.
“As Mr. Vance nurtures his political ambitions, Mr. Trump has repeatedly floated Marco Rubio, his secretary of state and national security adviser, as another potential presidential candidate. Mr. Rubio, by contrast, has been much more aligned with and central to Mr. Trump’s foreign policy agenda. In Islamabad, Mr. Vance will have his most high-profile test of negotiating on the world stage, and experts warn he faces a tall task.”


