Five things to know about the planned Iran-US talks in Islamabad
Pakistani Rangers stand guard near the expected venue of the US-Iran talks in the Red Zone area of Islamabad on April 10, 2026. Pakistan was poised on April 10 to host Iranian and US delegations for negotiations in its capital, although Tehran's participation remained uncertain after deadly Israeli strikes on Lebanon threatened this week's temporary truce. Photo by FAROOQ NAEEM / AFP
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Pakistan is due to host talks between Iran and the United
States in a bid to turn a fragile two-week ceasefire into a lasting end to a
war that has roiled global energy markets.
- The war behind the talks -
On February 28, the US and Israel launched deadly
coordinated strikes that killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and struck Iran's
military and nuclear infrastructure. More than 3,000 people were killed in Iran
in five weeks, according to Iranian media and US-based Human Rights Activists
News Agency (HRANA).
Tehran responded by effectively closing the Strait of
Hormuz, through which about a fifth of global oil and gas passes, sending
energy prices soaring and disrupting trade worldwide.
On April 8, the US and Iran agreed to a two-week ceasefire
brokered by Pakistan. The ceasefire is expected to expire April 22.
Pakistan's value as a mediator rests on an unusually broad
diplomatic network.
Iran was the first country to recognise Pakistan following
independence in 1947, with the two neighbours sharing a 900-kilometre
(560-mile) border and deep historical, cultural and religious ties. Pakistan is
also home to over 20 million Shia Muslims: the second-largest such population
in the world after Iran.
Islamabad has cultivated strong ties with Washington, Riyadh
and Beijing.
Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar visited Beijing at the
end of March for talks with Wang Yi, who backed Islamabad's mediation efforts
as "in keeping with the common interests of all parties".
Trump himself told AFP that China helped bring Iran to the
negotiating table, an account backed by Pakistani officials.
"On ceasefire night, hopes were fading, but China
stepped in and convinced Iran to agree to a preliminary ceasefire," a
senior Pakistani official familiar with the negotiations told AFP on condition
of anonymity.
The gap between the two sides remains vast.
Washington's reported 15-point proposal centres on Iran's
enriched uranium and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. Tehran has
countered with a 10-point plan demanding control over the strait, a toll for
vessels crossing the strait, an end to all regional military operations and the
lifting of all sanctions.
Lebanon is also a major sticking point. Israel continued its
strikes in the country targeting Hezbollah -- after the ceasefire came into
force -- with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejecting Prime
Minister Shehbaz Sharif's assertion that the truce included Lebanon.
US Vice President JD Vance appeared to take a softer tone,
saying there may have been a "legitimate misunderstanding" from Iran
that Lebanon would be included.
Iranian sources have also told Iranian media that Tehran
won't attend the talks unless a ceasefire is in place in Lebanon
Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian warned on X that Israel's
strikes on Lebanon rendered the negotiations "meaningless".
Iran has also long refused to concede to Washington's
demands on its nuclear programme.
Vance will lead the American team, joined by special envoy
Steve Witkoff and presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner.
It marks the most senior US engagement with Iran since
Secretary of State John Kerry negotiated the 2015 nuclear deal. Witkoff held
multiple rounds of Oman-mediated talks with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas
Araghchi before the war cut the process short.
Iran has not officially announced the composition of its
delegation.
The talks are being held in the Pakistani capital,
Islamabad.
The government has kept its cards close to its chest without
confirming the venue, but the Serena Hotel -- located next to the foreign
ministry in the capital's high-security Red Zone -- asked its guests to clear
out on Wednesday.
The same day authorities in the capital announced a two-day
public holiday on Thursday and Friday.
The talks themselves are expected to be indirect: the two
delegations sitting in separate rooms with Pakistani officials shuttling
proposals between them, mirroring the format used in earlier Oman-mediated
rounds.
Outside, the streets of Islamabad are flooded with armed
security personnel in military fatigues, traffic diversions and police
checkpoints. The capital, already a quiet city, was even quieter on Friday.

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