How Pakistan was able to broker a temporary truce between the U.S. and Iran
Pakistan ‘defied many skeptics and naysayers that didn't think it had the capacity to pull off such a complex, high stakes feat,’ says one expert
A vendor displays morning newspapers with news of the
Iran-U.S. ceasefire, at a roadside stall in Islamabad, Pakistan, on April 8,
2026. Photo by Aamir QURESHI/AFP
ISLAMABAD — Pakistan has emerged as a key intermediary
between Iran and the United States to secure a temporary ceasefire and host
negotiations to end the war in the Middle East.
On Wednesday, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said the United
States and Iran — and their allies had — agreed to a ceasefire “everywhere”
following mediation by his government.
Sharif said the two-week truce, which Trump and Tehran had
announced earlier, would next lead to talks in the Pakistan capital.
“Pakistan achieved one of its biggest diplomatic wins in
years,” said South Asia expert Michael Kugelman in an X post.
“It also defied many skeptics and naysayers that didn’t
think it had the capacity to pull off such a complex, high stakes feat.”
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What are Pakistan’s ties to Iran?
“Pakistan has strong credentials as the only country in the
region enjoying good relations with the U.S. and Iran,” said the country’s
former ambassador to Tehran, Asif Durrani.
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Pakistan shares a 900-kilometre border in its southwest
with Iran, and also deep historical, cultural and religious links.
Pakistan is home to the world’s second-biggest Shia Muslim
population after Iran.
Iran was the first country to recognize Pakistan after
independence in 1947. Pakistan returned the favour for the Islamic republic
after the 1979
Pakistan also represents some Iranian diplomatic interests
in Washington, where Tehran has no embassy.
What about the U.S.?
Pakistan’s powerful army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir,
has built up a personal rapport with U.S. President Donald Trump.
Munir — in a Western business suit rather than army
fatigues — visited Washington with Sharif last year after a flare-up in
hostilities between Pakistan and India in divided Kashmir.
Sharif praised Trump’s “bold and visionary” intervention,
while Munir said the U.S. leader deserved the Nobel Peace Prize for stopping an
escalation between the nuclear-armed neighbours.
On Iran, Trump said Pakistan knows the country “better than
most.”
Personal relations have long helped boost bilateral ties
shaped by shifting strategic interests that have at times been strained.
Even as a non-NATO ally in the post-9/11 “war on terror,”
Pakistan faced U.S. claims that it was harbouring militants who were
responsible for attacking coalition troops across the border in Afghanistan.
Relations strained further when U.S. troops killed al-Qaeda
chief Osama bin Laden on Pakistani soil in 2011 without telling Islamabad, and
Pakistan faced accusations of complicity in harbouring the fugitive.
What about other regional players?
Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed a strategic mutual defence
agreement in 2025, cementing longstanding ties but also restricting how far
Islamabad could go in supporting Tehran.
Sharif and his government have been quick to keep Riyadh on
side, and the prime minister recently visited for talks with Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman.
Pakistan also shares close ties with Beijing, which, Trump
told AFP, helped get Iran across the line to the negotiating table.
Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar hosted a meeting with
counterparts from Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Egypt last month for discussions on
de-escalating the conflict and then flew to Beijing for further talks.
China, which is Iran’s largest trading partner, then joined
its longstanding South Asian ally in calling for a plan to end the fighting
engulfing the Middle East, saying it supported “Pakistan playing a unique and
important role in easing the situation.”
What’s in it for Pakistan?
Neutrality makes economic sense for Pakistan, which relies
on oil and gas imports through the Strait of Hormuz and wants to avoid getting
dragged into further conflict on its doorstep.
Continued disruption would have worsened fuel supplies,
driven up prices and forced further austerity measures for the cash-strapped
government.
A permanent end to the war would not only boost regional
stability but also Pakistan’s international standing at a time when it is
locked in armed conflict with neigbouring Afghanistan and less than a year
after it traded strikes with arch-rival India.
What role will Pakistan play next?
The Pakistani premier said he would welcome U.S. and
Iranian delegations to the capital from April 10.
“Iran will feel more comfortable in Islamabad which is why
it accepted Pakistan’s mediation,” said Durrani, the former ambassador, adding
Pakistan could help the two sides resolve outstanding differences.
If talks were direct, “then Pakistan may help the parties
to fine-tune the language if there is a stalemate,” he said, adding that
Pakistan officials could also act as the go-between if the two sides would not
meet face-to-face.
Pakistan does not formally recognize Israel, which said on
Wednesday it supported Trump’s decision to suspend bombing, but that the
two-week ceasefire did not include Lebanon where it has carried out ground and
aerial operations against Iran-backed Hezbollah.
That contradicted Sharif’s earlier statement that the
ceasefire covered “everywhere including Lebanon.”
https://nationalpost.com/news/world/pakistan-us-iran-ceasefire
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