The United States and Iran are moving toward a short-term agreement to stop the current fighting, with Pakistan playing an active mediation role between the two sides.
A senior Pakistani official directly involved in the talks described the goal clearly: get both parties to declare a permanent end to hostilities first, then return to direct negotiations to work through the remaining issues. The sequencing matters, a ceasefire or end-of-war declaration would come before the harder diplomatic work begins.
What Pakistan's Role Signals
Pakistan's involvement as a go-between is notable. It suggests neither side is yet willing or able to sit across the table directly, making a trusted intermediary essential to move the process forward. The official's language, "thrashed out" in direct talks, implies the underlying disputes are significant and unresolved, with the current effort focused narrowly on stopping the fighting rather than solving the broader conflict.
What to Watch
The critical question is whether both Washington and Tehran agree on what a "permanent end to war" actually means before any deal is signed. Short-term agreements can hold long enough to open diplomatic space, but they can also collapse quickly if each side interprets the terms differently. Any formal announcement would likely be the trigger for resuming direct US-Iran dialogue, which has been stalled. Watch for signals from either capital confirming or rejecting the framework Pakistan is helping to build.