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Iran envoys meet Pakistani PM ahead of US talks

Emma Reilly by Emma Reilly
April 11, 2026
in Economy
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A policeman stands guard in front of a digital screen displaying news of US–Iran peace talks along a road in Pakistan's capital Islamabad. ©AFP

Islamabad (Pakistan) (AFP) – An Iranian government delegation met Pakistan’s prime minister on Saturday to discuss the terms of planned “make or break” negotiations to end the Middle East war with a US party led by Vice President JD Vance. With the first talks underway at Islamabad’s Serena Hotel, Iranian media reported that the Iranian side would decide at the end of the meeting with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif whether to go ahead with negotiations with the Americans.

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Iran has previously said that any agreement on a permanent end to fighting must include the unfreezing of sanctioned Iranian assets and include an end to Israel’s war on Hezbollah in Lebanon, which Vance has said will not be up for discussion in Islamabad. But both parties had arrived at the talks venue when the Iranian delegation led by parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf met Sharif, having arrived overnight at an air base near the capital and disembarked to embrace Pakistan’s powerful army chief Asim Munir.

Munir, who shares a personal rapport with US President Donald Trump, also greeted Vance, escorting him down a red carpet at the Nur Khan air base, where US special envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner were waiting. The warring parties still appeared to be far apart on key issues — including sanctions, Lebanon, and the opening of the strategic Strait of Hormuz — and made no attempt to hide their mutual suspicion.

“Our experience in negotiating with the Americans has always been met with failure and broken promises,” Ghalibaf said shortly after landing, according to Iran’s state broadcaster. Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, who is also part of the delegation, told his German counterpart in a call on Saturday that “Iran enters negotiations with complete distrust due to repeated breaches of commitments and betrayals by the United States,” the Tasnim news agency reported.

Vance said before leaving the US that if the other side was “willing to negotiate in good faith, we’re certainly willing to extend the open hand.” But “if they’re going to try to play us, then they’re going to find the negotiating team is not that receptive,” he added. The ceasefire is already under strain, notably from Israel’s continued strikes in Lebanon, which Iran and Pakistan insist are covered under the current truce.

Prime Minister Sharif, whose country’s down-to-the-wire mediation got both sides to the negotiating table this week, said talks would not be easy. “An even more difficult stage lies ahead,” he said, referring to efforts to permanently end fighting that began with US-Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28, sparking Iranian retaliation against Israel and across the Gulf. “This is that stage which, in English, is called the equivalent of ‘make or break.'”

Iran — which brought a more than 70-member delegation to Pakistan — has insisted on the truce covering Lebanon and on the unfreezing of its assets for the Islamabad talks to go ahead, neither of which has materialized so far. On the US side, Trump demanded the opening of the Strait of Hormuz as a condition for the two-week ceasefire. The strait, through which one-fifth of the world’s crude passes, has not reopened to normal traffic, however, and Trump vowed on Friday to have it open soon “with or without” Iran’s cooperation. He added that his top priority at the Islamabad talks was to ensure the Islamic republic had “no nuclear weapon. That’s 99 percent of it.”

Security was tight in the Pakistani capital on Saturday, with a heavy police and paramilitary presence on the streets and road diversions around the “red zone” where government and diplomatic buildings are located. Pakistan has formulated a team of subject matter specialists to facilitate the two sides in negotiations on navigation, nuclear, and other key matters, a diplomatic source familiar with the matter told AFP. The negotiations will be closely watched by other key regional players, with Egypt and Turkey having helped with mediation, along with China, all of which Pakistan was still coordinating closely with for the talks, the source said.

Beijing has been sought as a possible guarantor of any lasting agreement, official sources have said, with Trump confirming to AFP that China helped get Tehran to the negotiating table. Complicating the path to a permanent ceasefire was Israel’s assertion that the current truce does not cover Lebanon. Israeli air strikes continued in Lebanon on Friday against Iran-backed Hezbollah despite the Iranian demand that they be halted.

Israel’s ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter, said his country would hold discussions with Lebanon’s government in Washington next week but would not discuss a ceasefire with Hezbollah. The militant group said overnight that it had carried out drone and rocket attacks on northern Israel, as well as on Israeli forces in southern Lebanon. In Tehran, a 30-year-old resident told AFP he was skeptical negotiations would be successful, describing most of what Trump says as “pure noise and nonsense.”

© 2024 AFP

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