ISLAMABAD — In a high-stakes diplomatic push, Pakistan is actively pressuring the United States and Iran to return to the negotiating table and honor the memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed just last month.
Tahir Andrabi, a spokesman for Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry, acknowledged that the implementation of the agreement has hit significant roadblocks. However, he emphasized that Islamabad remains committed to de-escalation.
“While the implementation of the MoU is facing challenges, Pakistan will continue to encourage all sides to end violence and resume technical-level talks,” Andrabi told reporters in the capital.
Since the outbreak of the conflict on February 28, Pakistan has emerged as a pivotal, albeit unexpected, mediator between the two long-time adversaries. Its diplomatic efforts yielded a historic breakthrough in April, when it hosted the first direct talks between US and Iranian officials in over four decades.
Those initial discussions paved the way for a significant achievement in June: an interim de-escalation deal. That agreement bore the signatures of Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian and former US President Donald Trump, alongside Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, and was later presented at the Burgenstock summit in Switzerland.
Despite these past successes, the current path to peace is fraught with obstacles. Pakistan’s latest intervention underscores its precarious but critical role in attempting to prevent a further spiral into regional chaos.
The Road So Far:
- Feb 28: Conflict begins.
- April: Pakistan hosts historic direct talks between US and Iran.
- June: Interim deal signed by Pezeshkian, Trump, and Sharif.
- June: Deal discussed at Burgenstock summit.
- Today: Pakistan pushes for adherence to the stalled MoU





