← NewsAll
Senior U.S. officials may return to Pakistan for Iran talks
Summary
U.S. officials are weighing a delegation to Islamabad within days to resume talks with Iranian representatives; the effort is described as tentative and no firm date has been set.
Content
Senior U.S. officials could go back to Pakistan within days for renewed talks with Iranian representatives, according to people familiar with the deliberations. The outreach is described as tentative and aims to revive negotiations toward a longer-term agreement with Iran. Vice President J.D. Vance is being considered to lead a delegation that could include Steve Witkoff and other administration figures. No firm date had been finalized, though some sources said talks could resume as soon as Monday.
What is known:
- U.S. officials are weighing a delegation to Islamabad within days to resume discussions with Iranian representatives.
- Vice President J.D. Vance and special envoy Steve Witkoff are named as possible participants in any in-person talks.
- Prior negotiations in Islamabad last week were lengthy but ended without a breakthrough on core disputes, including Iran's nuclear activities and conditions for ending the war.
- Western leaders are meeting in Paris to address navigation and security concerns in the Strait of Hormuz while diplomatic and military measures continue.
Summary:
Arrangements remain tentative and no firm date has been set, though sources said talks could resume as soon as Monday. The immediate impact and any outcomes from further meetings are undetermined at this time.
