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Islamabad, Rawalpindi reopen after security lockdown amid ongoing Pakistan mediation

Islamabad, Rawalpindi reopen after security lockdown amid ongoing Pakistan mediation

Authorities on Sunday formally lifted traffic restrictions across the twin cities and highly commended the residents of Islamabad and Rawalpindi for showing patience during the recent security-related road closures.

Security was heightened, and restrictions were imposed for several days in the area ahead of anticipated US-Iran peace talks.

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Abbas Araghchi arrives in Pakistan after Oman visit amid renewed diplomatic efforts

Abbas Araghchi arrives in Pakistan after Oman visit amid renewed diplomatic efforts

ISLAMABAD: Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi arrived in Pakistan on Sunday following completing a brief visit to Oman as Islamabad intensified diplomatic efforts to revive stalled talks between Washington and Tehran.

He is undertaking the trip against the backdrop of ongoing diplomatic efforts, notably by Pakistan, to bring Tehran and Washington to the table to talks aimed at ending the conflict that began with US-Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28.

In Oman, Araghchi held talks with Sultan Haitham bin Tariq al-Said on security in the Strait of Hormuz and diplomatic efforts to end the Iran-US conflict.

The Iranian foreign minister is scheduled to depart for Moscow following his engagements in Pakistan.

Earlier, Iran’s official IRNA news agency reported that Araghchi would stop again in Islamabad before travelling to Russia.

According to Iran’s ISNA news agency, Araghchi is expected to meet Pakistani officials during his return visit to convey “Iran’s positions and views on the framework of any understanding to completely end the war”.

Araghchi had been in Islamabad only the day before, after which he travelled to Oman, while other Iranian envoys had headed back to Tehran “to consult and obtain the necessary instructions on issues related to ending the war”, according to ISNA news agency.

Before Saturday’s Iran-Pakistan meetings in Islamabad, the White House had announced that Trump’s peace envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner were planning to leave for Pakistan to engage in further negotiations.

But Trump later told Fox News he had scrapped the trip, saying there was no point “sitting around talking about nothing”.

He dismissed Tehran’s negotiating position, but added that it had revised its proposal within minutes of his decision.

“They gave us a paper that should have been better and — interestingly — immediately when I cancelled it, within 10 minutes, we got a new paper that was much better,” he told reporters, without elaborating.

Also read:Trump cancels envoys’ Islamabad trip, dealing blow to US-Iran peace efforts

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Trump cancels envoys’ Islamabad trip, dealing blow to US-Iran peace efforts

Trump rejects ceasefire extension ahead of Iran talks

ISLAMABAD: United States President Donald Trump cancelled a ‌trip by two U.S. envoys to Iran war mediator Pakistan on Saturday, dealing a new setback to peace prospects after Iran’s foreign minister flew out of Islamabad following talks in the capital, Reuters reported.

“I just cancelled the trip of my representatives going to Islamabad, Pakistan, to meet with the Iranians. Too much time wasted on traveling, too much work… Nobody knows who is in charge, including them. Also, we have all the cards, they have none! If they want to talk, all they have to do is call,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi earlier left the Pakistani capital without any sign of a ​breakthrough in talks with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and other senior officials.

Araqchi later described his visit to Pakistan as “very fruitful,” adding in a social media post that he had “shared Iran’s position concerning (a) workable framework to permanently end the war on Iran. Have yet to see if the U.S. ​is truly serious about diplomacy”.

Islamabad, which had been expected to host the discussions, continues to be viewed as a potential venue for future diplomatic engagement if negotiations resume.

The development comes amid ongoing efforts by regional and international stakeholders to find a negotiated path to de-escalation, with Islamabad seen as playing a constructive and facilitative role in bringing parties to the table.

Also read:22 militants killed in intelligence-based operation in Khyber District

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Trump rejects ceasefire extension ahead of Iran talks

Trump rejects ceasefire extension ahead of Iran talks

WASHINGTON: United States President Donald Trump on Tuesday said that he did not want to extend a ceasefire with Iran, adding the US was in a strong negotiating position and would end up with what he called a great deal.

“I think they have no choice,” Trump said in an interview with CNBC.

“We’ve taken out their navy, we’ve taken out their air force, we’ve taken out their leaders,” the US President was quoted as saying.

Trump added the US was entering talks from a position of strength, as the US negotiation team led by Vice President JD Vance prepared for dialogue with Iranian officials in Pakistan’s capital Islamabad.

“We’re in a very, very strong negotiating position,” he told CNBC.

The US President’s remarks come ahead of a second round of talks between the US and Iran in Islamabad aimed at ending the conflict.

Trump indicated he was not inclined to extend the current ceasefire, which is due to expire on Wednesday.

Foreign ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei on Tuesday told Iranian state TV that Tehran had not yet made a decision on whether to attend talks with the US in Pakistan.

He further said US moves against two Iranian vessels amounted to “piracy at sea and state terrorism” and questioned Washington’s seriousness in negotiating.

“The aggression against Iranian ships and the continued pressure indicate the continuation of the opposing side’s contradictory behaviour,” Baghaei added.

Pakistan has played a critical role in mediating talks between the U.S. and Iran, hosting an initial round of negotiations earlier this month and making strides to facilitate more talks ahead of the ceasefire’s scheduled expiration on Wednesday.

Also read:New Iran nuclear deal will be better than old: Trump

 

 

 

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Donald Trump announces new United States–Iran talks in Pakistan amid fresh threats

Trump rejects ceasefire extension ahead of Iran talks

ISLAMABAD: U.S. President Donald Trump said on Sunday his envoys would return to Pakistan for new talks with ​Iran, while threatening new attacks on Iran’s bridges and power plants unless it accepts his terms, Reuters repoerted.

White House official said that US Vice President JD Vance will lead the US delegation for talks with Iran in Pakistan, after President Donald Trump indicated Vance would not make the trip.

Vance, special envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner will attend the talks, a White House official told AFP on condition of anonymity when asked about the makeup of the delegation after Trump’s comments.

Trump said the U.S. delegation would arrive on Monday evening, a timetable that leaves just a day for ‌talks to make progress before a two-week ceasefire ends.

“We’re offering a very fair and reasonable DEAL, and I hope they take it because, if they don’t, the United States is going to knock out every single Power Plant, and every single Bridge, in Iran,” he posted on social media. “NO MORE MR. NICE GUY!”

A delegation from Iran will arrive in Islamabad on Tuesday and work toward announcing a ceasefire extension with the US the following day, CNN reported, citing Iranian sources.

The first round of historic direct US-Iran talks was held in Islamabad on April 11 and 12 had ended without an agreement, but also without a breakdown.

Also read:First Pakistani pilgrims arrive in Madinah under Makkah route initiative

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Trump to Visit Islamabad to Seal Iran Peace Deal

Trump to Visit Islamabad to Seal Iran Peace Deal

The Iran–United States standoff has reached a decisive moment. After weeks of tension, destruction, and global anxiety, President Donald Trump has signaled that a peace agreement with Iran is not only possible but near. Reuters reported on April 16 that Trump said he might go to Islamabad if the deal is signed there, while Pakistan confirmed that diplomacy is still active even though no date has yet been fixed for another round of talks. That makes Islamabad not just a venue, but the emerging diplomatic center of one of the world’s most dangerous crises.

At the heart of this breakthrough are two long-standing sticking points. First, Iran’s willingness to formally commit that it will not pursue nuclear weapons. Second, Trump’s claim that Iran is prepared to hand over what he called the buried enriched material or “nuclear dust” after earlier strikes on key nuclear sites. Whether every detail is ultimately verified through a final written accord remains to be seen, but politically these two points give both sides a framework to claim success: Washington can say it stopped nuclear escalation, and Tehran can say it preserved the state while opening the door to sanctions relief and normal engagement.

This shift comes at a staggering cost. The conflict has already killed thousands across the region, disrupted trade, and shaken financial markets. The Strait of Hormuz remains the central economic flashpoint. Official and major news reporting continues to note that roughly one-fifth of global oil trade moves through that corridor, so any disruption there instantly becomes a worldwide inflation tax. Reuters has also reported fuel stress inside the United States, while AP has warned that Europe faces severe jet-fuel pressure if normal flows do not resume. In other words, this war has not remained a battlefield event; it has become a global cost-of-living event.

Against this backdrop, Trump’s possible visit to Islamabad to sign a peace agreement with Iranian leaders is not symbolic theater. It is a strategic turning point. A signing in Pakistan would show that the crisis has moved from bombs to bargaining, from blockades to diplomacy, and from military coercion to structured de-escalation. For Iran, such a meeting would signal the possible beginning of normalized state-to-state relations with the United States after more than four decades of sanctions, hostility, and mutual distrust. For Washington, it would create a face-saving exit from a risky conflict while preserving its declared objective of preventing an Iranian nuclear weapons path.

For Iran, the economic upside is enormous. Even partial sanctions relief could unlock tens of billions of dollars a year by restoring oil export capacity, reopening access to financing channels, and reviving deferred investment. A reasonable peace-dividend range for Iran is $50–100 billion annually, including renewed oil sales and broader economic normalization. For the United States, the gain lies less in direct trade and more in avoided damage: lower energy prices, less inflation pressure, reduced military expenditure, and calmer markets. If a durable accord brings oil down meaningfully from crisis highs, the U.S. and its consumers could benefit from a broader global energy relief effect worth well over $100 billion, while averted war escalation could spare Washington and its allies additional costs running into the hundreds of billions. These are not marginal improvements; they are strategic savings.

Domestic politics in Washington have helped push events in this direction, but that factor should be understood as a nudge, not the whole story. The War Powers Resolution in the House failed by just 213–214, with one Republican voting present, a narrower margin than the earlier 212–219 vote, showing that resistance to a prolonged Iran war is growing. That tightening gap matters because it warns the White House that escalation is becoming politically more expensive. But the larger story is not congressional arithmetic; it is that the administration now sees more value in a deal than in a drawn-out confrontation.

Europe also stands to gain substantially. AP’s reporting on jet-fuel risk underscores how quickly Gulf supply disruption can hit European transport, tourism, freight, and manufacturing. If Hormuz normalizes and oil and refined-product flows resume, Europe could avoid tens of billions in emergency energy costs and secondary losses. A prudent estimate is that Europe’s peace dividend could reach $100–200 billion annually through lower fuel costs, restored industrial confidence, and reduced inflationary strain. The Middle East itself could gain even more. Stabilized energy markets, improved investor sentiment, reduced shipping risk, and resumed regional projects could yield $200–400 billion a year in combined benefits across Gulf producers, transport corridors, and reconstruction-linked sectors.

China and Russia both have major stakes in de-escalation, though in different ways. China, as a giant energy importer and a leading Belt and Road power, gains from open sea lanes, cheaper hydrocarbons, and secure corridor expansion westward. Russia, though an energy exporter, still benefits from lower geopolitical volatility in trade and finance and from more stable Eurasian connectivity.

It is reasonable to estimate that China’s direct and indirect peace dividend could run to $80–120 billion annually, while Russia’s could be in the $20–40 billion range through steadier energy planning, logistics, and regional commerce. Those figures are necessarily scenario-based, but the direction is beyond dispute: peace pays, and war taxes everyone.

However, the country that may gain the most strategically from this accord is Pakistan. Pakistan’s role as mediator has already elevated its standing. It hosted the talks, kept channels open after the 21-hour breakdown in Islamabad, and retained the confidence of both Washington and Tehran at a time when very few capitals could do so. That diplomatic success now has a direct economic translation.

Pakistan’s existing two-way goods trade with the United States was about $7.23 billion in 2024, with the U.S. remaining Pakistan’s largest goods export market at $5.12 billion. Iran and Pakistan, meanwhile, have publicly targeted $10 billion in annual bilateral trade.

If peace removes sanctions-related friction and unlocks energy and transit cooperation, Pakistan could realistically position itself for an incremental economic gain of $15–25 billion annually within a few years: roughly $7–8 billion from scaling Pakistan-Iran trade toward the $10 billion target, $3–5 billion in annual energy savings from a revived Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline, $1–2 billion from stronger U.S.-Pakistan trade and investment momentum, and several more billions from transit, logistics, warehousing, border markets, services, and Gulf-linked agriculture and infrastructure inflows.

Over a decade, if corridor integration through CPEC extends into Iran and toward Central Asia and the Middle East, Pakistan’s cumulative strategic economic upside could run into the tens of billions more, potentially crossing $50 billion in combined direct and indirect value. This is why the Islamabad peace track is not merely diplomatic theater for Pakistan; it is a possible economic turning point.

That is also why the peace dividend for Pakistan is larger than simple trade arithmetic. Peace would strengthen Pakistan’s reputation with Washington, Tehran, Beijing, Riyadh, Ankara, and the Gulf monarchies all at once. It would improve investor confidence at a moment when Pakistan still needs reserve support and external financing, as shown by the recent additional $3 billion Saudi support package reported by Reuters.

A successful mediation would allow Pakistan to market itself not as a security risk at the edge of crises, but as the state that prevented a wider war and made regional commerce possible. That kind of reputational shift lowers financing risk, improves deal flow, and can turn diplomacy into development.

At the geopolitical level, the emerging U.S.-Iran rapprochement may also reorder the regional equation. Israel, long a central force in the confrontation with Iran, appears less central to the actual peace architecture now taking shape. The more Washington and Tehran negotiate directly, the more the region shifts from confrontation through intermediaries to pragmatic statecraft. That does not erase old rivalries, but it does signal that the next chapter may be written less by missile launches and more by summit tables.

Yet caution remains necessary. The ceasefire is still fragile. Verification of nuclear commitments, sequencing of sanctions relief, security guarantees, shipping normalization, and the politics of implementation in Tehran and Washington will all matter. A single military incident or political reversal could still spoil the process. But even with that uncertainty, the direction of travel is now clearer than it was days ago: diplomacy has regained momentum because war has exposed its own unbearable cost.

Still, the balance sheet is compelling. The war may already have inflicted global economic damage in the high hundreds of billions of dollars. Peace, by contrast, could unlock a multi-year dividend that plausibly reaches $1–2 trillion across energy, trade, shipping, reconstruction, investment, inflation relief, and avoided military escalation. In that larger picture, Pakistan’s role is neither ceremonial nor incidental. It is central.

Islamabad has offered the table, the channel, and the trust that others could not. If the accord is signed there, Pakistan will not merely have hosted history. It will have helped redirect it.

 

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Pakistan urges media to avoid speculation on United States–Iran talks timeline as diplomatic process continues

Foreign Office - The News Today - TNT

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan have called on media outlets to refrain from speculating about the schedule of the next round of United StatesIran negotiations, emphasising that no timeline has been finalized and that diplomatic efforts are still underway.

“If we had shared such information, it would have been a breach of trust,” Foreign Office spokesperson Tahir Hussain Andrabi said.

Addressing a weekly briefing, the spokesperson declined to share details of diplomatic engagements, emphasising the need for trust and confidentiality.

When asked about the delegation for a second round of dialogue, he said, “Who will come, how large the delegation will be, who will stay, and who will leave — this is for the parties to decide.”

“The important thing is that both sides are willing to engage and dialogue continues,” he said, adding that details about delegations and participation were secondary and an internal matter of the concerned parties.

His remarks came amid reports that negotiating teams from the US and Iran could return to Pakistan later this week, five sources told Reuters, days after the highest-level inaugural talks between the two countries in decades ended inconclusively.

Earlier, US Vice President JD Vance concluded talks in Islamabad with a senior Iranian delegation led by Parliamentary Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf.

The negotiations – the highest-level direct engagement between the two sides since the 1979 revolution – ended without a breakthrough, though Washington described its proposal as a “final and best offer”.

Also read:PM Shehbaz Sharif arrives in Saudi Arabia for four-day official visit

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Pakistan and the Trillion-Dollar Peace Dividend

Islamabad may host second round of US-Iran talks after initial meeting ends without breakthrough

At a moment when the world stood dangerously close to a wider regional inferno, Pakistan has emerged not merely as a bystander, but as one of the few states able to talk to all sides and keep diplomacy alive. As of April 15, 2026, there is still no final U.S.-Iran agreement, and no official ceasefire extension has been publicly confirmed. But Washington says fresh talks may happen in Pakistan within days, President Trump is signaling optimism, Pakistan’s military chief has been in Tehran, and regional diplomacy is now visibly revolving around Pakistani mediation. That alone marks a dramatic shift in Pakistan’s standing in the current geopolitical crisis.

The facts matter. The first 21-hour round of talks in Islamabad ended without a deal, with Vice President JD Vance saying Iran had not accepted core U.S. demands, especially on the nuclear issue. Yet Pakistan did not walk away after that setback. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif publicly said Pakistan’s “full effort” remained focused on ending the conflict, while Field Marshal Asim Munir traveled to Tehran in an attempt to narrow differences before the ceasefire expires. That is the real significance of Pakistan’s role: not that it solved the war in one stroke, but that it kept open the only serious diplomatic corridor after formal negotiations collapsed.

This matter because the war’s costs are no longer theoretical. The conflict that began on February 28 has already killed more than 5,000 people across the region. The repair costs to damaged energy infrastructure alone may reach as high as $58 billion. The Strait of Hormuz, through which about one-fifth of global oil and LNG normally passes, remains the central choke point in the conflict. Even after the April 8 ceasefire, traffic through Hormuz had at one stage fallen to less than 10% of normal, while ships and crews remained trapped and insurers, traders and governments braced for a prolonged shock.

That is why Pakistan’s diplomatic intervention should be understood not only in moral or political terms, but in financial ones. No government or international institution has yet issued an official dollar figure for what Pakistan has “saved.” Still, scenario-based calculations grounded in World Bank, IMF and Reuters reporting suggest that if Pakistan’s mediation helps convert the fragile ceasefire into a durable settlement, the avoided losses could plausibly run from the high hundreds of billions into the low trillions. This is not propaganda; it is what the macroeconomic numbers imply.

Start with global growth. The IMF cut its 2026 global growth forecast to 3.1% because of the war and warned that, in a severe scenario, growth could fall to 2.0%. The World Bank separately warned that even in a best case the war could shave 0.3 to 0.4 percentage points off global growth, and as much as 1 point in a prolonged conflict. WTTC data showing global travel and tourism alone contributed $11.7 trillion in 2025, equal to 10.3% of global GDP, implying a world economy of roughly $113.6 trillion. On that basis, preventing a 0.3–0.4 point hit means protecting roughly $341 billion to $454 billion of global output. Preventing a 1-point hit protects about $1.14 trillion. Preventing the IMF’s 1.1-point slide from 3.1% to 2.0% implies roughly $1.25 trillion in avoided output loss.

And that is only the macro layer. Add the already-estimated $58 billion energy repair bill, the IMF’s warning that more than a dozen countries may need $20 billion to $50 billion in support, the World Bank’s preparedness to mobilize $80 billion to $100 billion for war-hit economies, and the UNDP estimate that just $6 billion in emergency support could keep 32 million people from falling into poverty due to the war-driven energy shock. Even before counting military fuel, munitions, deployment costs, higher insurance, rerouted shipping, lost industrial output and inflation spillovers, the visible tally of avoided or containable damage quickly rises into the hundreds of billions.

Markets themselves are already pricing the value of diplomacy. Gulf stock markets rising on renewed hopes of U.S.-Iran talks, while Wall Street pushed to record highs as investors bet the worst might be avoided. Brent crude, though still elevated, has pulled back from the panic zone above $100 and hovered around $95 on April 15 as traders responded to the possibility of renewed negotiations. Eleven finance ministers meeting around the IMF-World Bank spring meetings called for full implementation of the ceasefire, warning that even if the shooting stops, the economic aftershocks on inflation, growth and debt will linger. That is the clearest evidence that diplomacy is not a symbolic exercise; it is already functioning as a stabilizing economic asset.

Pakistan’s importance in this crisis is therefore not accidental. It has managed to present itself as credible to Washington, acceptable to Tehran, relevant to Gulf capitals and increasingly necessary to wider regional diplomacy that now also involves Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Egypt. President Erdogan has openly referenced Pakistan’s mediator role, while the White House has acknowledged Pakistan as the likely venue for the next round. In a fractured region where many actors are aligned too heavily with one bloc or another, Pakistan’s value lies in being politically connected, militarily serious, diplomatically flexible and geographically impossible to ignore.

Still, the argument must remain grounded. Pakistan has not yet “saved the world” in any final sense, because the war is not formally over, the Hormuz issue is unresolved, Lebanon remains volatile, and the hardest questions — nuclear verification, sanctions, shipping access and war damages — are still on the table. The IAEA chief has warned that any real settlement will require detailed inspections, and Reuters says U.S. economic pressure on Iran is still intensifying even while diplomacy continues. So the credit Pakistan deserves today is not for a completed peace, but for preventing diplomatic collapse and preserving the one path that could still save the region from a second explosion.

If the second round succeeds, Pakistan’s diplomatic dividend will be immense. It will not simply have hosted talks; it will have helped prevent a wider energy shock, a deeper inflation spiral, further destruction across Iran and the region, and perhaps a global recession. In scenario terms, that would place Pakistan’s peace dividend somewhere between roughly $341 billion and $1.25 trillion in avoided world output loss, before adding infrastructure, humanitarian and fiscal savings. For a country long described as fragile, indebted and peripheral, that would be a stunning reversal. Pakistan may still be economically constrained, but in this crisis it has demonstrated something rarer than wealth: strategic usefulness. And in the modern world order, the country that can stop a war may matter more than the country that can afford one.

 

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PM Shehbaz Sharif arrives in Saudi Arabia for four-day official visit

Shehbaz Sharif Arrives in Saudi Arabia for Four-Day Official Visit

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif arrived in Saudi Arabia on Wednesday, beginning a four-day diplomatic visit, as Islamabad intensifies efforts ahead of a possible second round of US-Iran peace talks.

He was received by the Deputy Governor of Makkah Region, Prince Saud bin Mishaal bin Abdulaziz, at King Abdulaziz International Airport, a PM office statement said.

He is accompanied by Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar, and Special Assistant Tariq Fatemi.

“The Prime Minister will hold a bilateral meeting with the Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister Prince Muhammad bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud. The meeting will include discussions about the deepening of the Pakistan-Saudi Arabia partnership, as well as the wider situation in the region,” it said.

In Turkiye, he will take part in the fifth Antalya Diplomacy Forum and present Pakistan’s position in the Leaders’ Panel along with other world leaders, the FO added.

“Pakistan’s participation in the forum reflects its continued commitment to constructive diplomacy, multilateral cooperation, and meaningful engagement with the international community on issues of global importance,” the FO statement said.

On the sidelines of the forum, PM Shehbaz was “expected to hold bilateral meetings with President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and other key world leaders”.

Islamabad intensified efforts to act as a mediator between the United States and Iran to end the war that had engulfed the Middle East, leading to a fragile, temporary ceasefire and a first round of talks in Islamabad.

Also read:Islamabad could host upcoming Iran-US talks: Trump

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China urges restraint after Donald Trump threatens Hormuz blockade

China urges restraint after Donald Trump threatens Hormuz blockade

BEIJING: China urged calm and restraint by all sides on Monday after U.S. President Donald Trump’s threat to ​blockade the Strait of Hormuz following the failure of weekend ‌talks in Islamabad aimed at ending the Iran war, Reuters reported.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun added the Strait of Hormuz remains a vital artery for global trade and energy flows, adding that maintaining maritime security is crucial for the international community.

“China hopes ​the relevant parties will abide by the temporary ceasefire arrangements, remain committed ​to resolving disputes through political and diplomatic means, and avoid a resumption of hostilities,” he stated.

China stood ready to “play a positive and constructive role” in resolving the ​crisis, Guo added, calling the opening talks in the Pakistani capital a ​step in a direction conducive to easing tension.

Guo Jiakun added disruptions in navigation in the region have historical roots dating back to the Iran-Iraq War.  He noted that the long-term solution lies in an immediate ceasefire and sustained regional stability.

Direct talk between the United States and Iran — known as the Islamabad Talks — ended without an agreement today.

Delegations from the two sides, with Ghalibaf leading the Iranian side and US Vice President JD Vance leading Washington’s effort, had met in Pakistan’s capital Islamabad on Saturday for talks mediated by Pakistan; however, the parties concluded without reaching any agreement.

After the end of the Islamabad round of talks without agreement or conclusion, Trump’s remarks on tightening maritime restrictions in the Strait of Hormuz further heightened tensions in a region already on edge due to stalled diplomacy.

China urged all parties to exercise calm and avoid escalation, reiterating that dialogue and political settlement remain the only viable path forward.

Alsor read:Police constable killed, four injured in attack on polio team security escort in KP

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