Pakistan’s top leaders review mediation drive as US and Iranian delegations head to Islamabad for high-stakes talks

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Field Marshal Asim Munir, Pakistan’s chief of army staff and chief of defence forces, met Thursday to review the country’s mediation efforts aimed at forging a lasting peace between the United States and Iran, just a day before delegations from both nations are expected to arrive here for direct negotiations.

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World leaders thank Pakistan for halting U.S.-Iran fighting and reopening Strait of Hormuz

ISLAMABAD: World leaders, European governments and international institutions on Wednesday thanked Pakistan for its central role in brokering a two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran, a fragile pause in weeks of fighting that had threatened to choke off global energy supplies and destabilize the Middle East.

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Imran Khan holds court-ordered jail meeting with lawyer as opposition alliance postpones protest and demands releases, dialogue

ISLAMABAD: Barrister Salman Safdar, the lawyer representing former prime minister Imran Khan in the Al Qadir Trust case, met Thursday with the imprisoned Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf founder inside Adiala jail, one day after the Islamabad High Court ordered prison authorities to arrange the encounter.

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Opposition leaders rally behind government’s mediation in US-Iran ceasefire, calling off planned protest

ISLAMABAD: In a striking display of cross-party unity rarely seen in Pakistan’s polarised parliament, the leader of the opposition in the National Assembly on Wednesday offered the government unconditional support for its diplomatic efforts to help secure a ceasefire between the United States and Iran, while the main opposition party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, abruptly canceled a major protest rally scheduled for the following day.

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Pakistan Brokers a Breather — Now Comes the Hard Part

The announcement came just before dawn in Islamabad on Wednesday: a two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran, brokered at the last possible minute by Pakistani officials who understood what Washington’s bluster had obscured. President Trump had warned that “a whole civilization will die tonight” if Iran refused to reopen the Strait of Hormuz by his deadline. Instead, the pause arrived not through American firepower but through quiet Pakistani channels — a small circle of diplomats and military leaders who shuttled messages between adversaries who no longer trusted each other to speak directly. Iran agreed to coordinate safe passage through the strait, the artery carrying one-fifth of the world’s oil. The United States suspended its strikes. And both sides, predictably, declared victory.

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Trump and Iran accept Pakistan-brokered two-week pause in fighting, with talks set for Islamabad

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan said on Wednesday that the United States and Iran, along with their allies, had reached an immediate ceasefire across the Middle East, including in Lebanon, after weeks of intensifying conflict that began with American and Israeli strikes on Iranian targets in late February.

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Sharif asks Trump to delay Iran deadline by two weeks to salvage diplomacy

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif appealed directly to President Donald Trump on Tuesday to grant Iran a two-week extension on a looming US deadline to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and reach a deal with Washington, warning that failure to allow more time for diplomacy could derail a fragile peace process in the Middle East.

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