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"path": "/news/2002129/us-hopeful-as-islamabad-tries-to-prevail-on-tehran",
"publishedAt": "2026-05-22T02:21:15.000Z",
"site": "https://www.dawn.com",
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"textContent": "**• Rubio sees progress towards ending war after Pakistani officials’ visit; upset by Nato allies’ snub\n• Reports suggest CDF Munir may travel to Iran if Naqvi-led talks lead to breakthrough\n• Tehran says it is reviewing latest US proposal; Hormuz control remains key sticking point**\n\nISLAMABAD: As Pakistani officials continued to lay the groundwork for a possible US-Iran rapprochement, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio appeared hopeful for progress towards ending the war with Iran, despite the rigid stances adopted by both countries.\n\nPakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, who is visiting Iran for the second time in a week, engaged the senior Iranian leadership, including Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni, on Thursday to prevent a communications breakdown.\n\nThe efforts made by Pakistan were seemingly acknowledged by Rubio, who hoped for a breakthrough on the back of these talks, saying: “There’s some good signs… I don’t want to be overly optimistic … So, let’s see what happens over the next few days.”\n\nRubio also renewed criticism of Nato allies for not supporting the US in its war on Iran, as he headed to alliance talks in Sweden, _AFP_ reported. US President Donald Trump is “not asking them to send their fighter jets in. But they refuse to do anything,” he told reporters. “We were very upset about that.”\n\n“I believe the Pakistanis will be travelling to Tehran today. So hopefully that’ll advance this further,” Rubio told reporters on Thursday.\n\n> View this post on Instagram \n\nHis statement came amid reports that a high-level functionary from Pakistan could be travelling to the Iranian capital to capitalise on progress made by the interior minister.\n\nThe _Reuters_ wire service, quoting Iran’s _ISNA_ news agency, reported that Chief of Defence Forces Field Marshal Asim Munir was expected to arrive in Tehran, but there was no official word from Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) about the army chief’s schedule.\n\nReports further suggested that the high-level visit may take place if current efforts — led by Naqvi — succeed in reducing gaps sufficiently to warrant higher-level intervention. According to _ISNA_ , the reported visit would be aimed at continuing “talks and consultations” with Iranian authorities. It did not provide details.\n\nAs of Thursday evening, talks appeared to have narrowed into difficult text-based bargaining over an interim formula, focused on uranium custody, sanctions relief, maritime security and guarantees against renewed strikes.\n\nAccording to diplomats, the process has entered a critical phase, even though there are concerns if talks collapsed at this stage, it would push the region back toward military confrontation.\n\n**Focus on Hormuz**\n\nMeanwhile, Iran said it was reviewing Washington’s latest position on ending the war. “We have received US views and are reviewing them,” Iranian state-run agency _Nour_ News quoted Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei as saying. He said messages had been exchanged “on several occasions” between Tehran and Washington through Pakistan based on a 14-point Iranian proposal.\n\nDiplomatic officials said the negotiations were focused on constructing a narrowly managed stabilisation framework capable of extending the ceasefire and creating space for structured follow-up on talks during the next 30 days.\n\nThe most sensitive of those disputes increasingly appears to be the future status of the Strait of Hormuz, which has now evolved from a wartime pressure point into a central issue within the negotiations themselves.\n\nBut Iran’s announcement defining a formal “management and supervisory zone” in Hormuz significantly raised the stakes of the diplomacy by signalling Tehran’s intention to institutionalise elements of the leverage it acquired during the conflict. Washington has continued to insist on unrestricted maritime passage and is opposing any Iranian-controlled tolling or supervisory arrangement in Hormuz, viewing such mechanisms as incompatible with a durable diplomatic settlement.\n\nRubio told reporters a diplomatic solution would be unfeasible if Tehran implemented a tolling system in the Strait of Hormuz.\n\nThe future of Hormuz remains a key sticking point in the negotiations, with fears growing that the global economy will feel more pain as pre-war oil stockpiles run down.\n\n**UAE irked**\n\nIran’s new body overseeing the Strait of Hormuz said its claimed area of control extends to Emirati waters, drawing a sharp rebuke from the Gulf neighbour. In a post on X on Wednesday accompanied by a map, the newly-established Persian Gulf Strait Authority said it had outlined “the regulatory jurisdiction for the management” of the strait.\n\nIt said this covered the area between the line extending from “Kuh-e Mubarak in Iran to the south of Fujairah in the UAE… to the line connecting the tip of Qeshm island in Iran to Umm Al-Quwain in the UAE”.\n\nIt added that “transit through this area for the purpose of passing through the Hormuz Strait requires coordination with, and authorisation from, the Persian Gulf Strait Authority”.\n\nEmirati presidential adviser Anwar Gargash on Thursday slammed the Iranian announcement. “The regime is trying to establish a new reality born from a clear military defeat, but attempts to control the Strait of Hormuz or infringe on the UAE’s maritime sovereignty are nothing but pipe dreams,” he posted on X.\n\n> _With input from Agencies_\n\n_Published in Dawn, May 22nd, 2026_",
"title": "US ‘hopeful’ as Islamabad tries to prevail on Tehran"
}