Iran's Araghchi and US envoys Witkoff, Kushner heading to Pakistan for talks


US President Donald Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared ​Kushner will travel to Islamabad on Saturday morning for talks with Iran mediated by Pakistan, the White House confirmed, as Iran’s foreign minister made his way to the Pakistani capital ​on Friday.

With the two sides sending senior negotiators to the city, hopes are building that a resumption of peace talks could pave the way to ending the conflict.

The Trump administration has seen "some progress" from the ‌Iranian side in the ‌last couple of ​days, ‌White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Friday.

"Steve and ​Jared ⁠will be heading to Pakistan tomorrow to hear the Iranians out. We hope progress will be made and we hope that positive developments will come from this meeting," she told reporters.

Leavitt said Vice ‌President JD Vance, who led a first round of unsuccessful talks with Iran in Islamabad earlier this month, is ready to travel to Pakistan ‌to join talks if they prove successful.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in a statement on X he was embarking on visits to Pakistan, Oman and Russia to coordinate with partners on bilateral matters and consult on regional developments, adding that Iran’s neighbors remained Tehran’s priority.

Two Pakistani government sources aware of the discussions initially said Araghchi’s visit would be to discuss Iran’s proposals for talks with the US, which mediator Pakistan would then convey to Washington.

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, speaking around the same time the news emerged, told a briefing that Iran had a chance to make a “good deal” with the ‌United States.

“Iran knows ‌that they still have an open window to choose wisely ... at the negotiating table. All ​they ‌have ⁠to do ​is abandon ⁠a nuclear weapon in meaningful and verifiable ways,” he said.

Reports on Araghchi’s trip in Iranian state media and the Pakistani sources made no mention of Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, the speaker of Iran’s parliament, who was the head of its delegation at the only talks held so far, earlier this month.

Pakistani sources had said earlier that a US logistics and security team was already in place in Islamabad for potential talks

A Pakistan Army soldier stands along a street leading to the Red Zone area after tightened security measures ahead of possible US–Iran peace talks in Islamabad on Friday. (AFP)

The last round of peace talks had been expected on Tuesday but never took place, with Iran saying it was not yet ready to commit to attending and a US delegation led by Vance never leaving Washington.

President Donald Trump unilaterally extended a two-week ceasefire on Tuesday at the 11th hour to allow more time to reconvene ⁠the negotiators

On Thursday, Israel and Lebanon extended a separate ceasefire for three weeks ‌at a meeting at the White House brokered by Trump.

The war in Lebanon, which ‌Israel invaded last month to root out Iran’s Hezbollah allies after the militant group fired across ​the border, has run in parallel with the wider Iran ‌war, and Tehran says a ceasefire there is a precondition for talks.

There was little sign of an end to the fighting in ‌the south of the country, however, as Lebanese authorities reported two people killed by an Israeli strike and Hezbollah downed an Israeli drone.

While the ceasefire that came into force on April 16 has led to a significant reduction in hostilities, Israel and Hezbollah have continued to trade blows in southern Lebanon, where Israel has kept soldiers in a self-declared “buffer zone.”

Responding to the extension, Hezbollah lawmaker Ali Fayyad said, “it is essential to point out that the ceasefire is meaningless in light of Israel’s ‌insistence on hostile acts, including assassinations, shelling, and gunfire” and its demolition of villages and towns in the south.

Trump said on Thursday he was in no rush to reach ⁠an agreement with Iran and wanted it ⁠to be “everlasting,” while asserting that the US had an upper hand in a standoff in the Strait of Hormuz, the world’s most important energy shipping route.

The United States has yet to find a way to open the strait, where Iran has blocked nearly all ships apart from its own since the start of the war eight weeks ago. Iran showed off its control this week by seizing two huge cargo vessels there.

Trump imposed a separate blockade of Iranian shipping last week, with US forces boarding several Iranian ships in international waters. Iran says it will not reopen the strait until Trump lifts his blockade. Only five ships crossed the strait in the last 24 hours, shipping data showed on Friday, compared to around 130 a day before the war. Those included one Iranian oil products tanker, but none of the vast crude-carrying supertankers that normally feed global energy markets.

Container shipping company Hapag-Lloyd also said one of its ships had crossed, without giving details. Though Trump has said that US forces have destroyed Iran’s naval threat, the use of a swarm of small, fast boats to seize the container ships on Thursday underscored Tehran’s ​evolving tactics in the strait as it counters US interception of Iran-linked ​oil tankers and other vessels.

Pressure for a way out of the war has mounted on Trump, meanwhile, as his fellow Republicans defend narrow majorities in Congress in the November midterm elections with US gasoline prices high, inflation rising and his own approval ratings down.


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