World

Pakistan and Qatar Pursue Iran Talks Without New Terms

Pakistan's Foreign Ministry said July 16 that the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding remains an enduring framework and that the Pakistan-Qatar Joint Statement of June 22 remains the roadmap for implementing the peace process; the ministry said escalation had challenged mediation, not ended the relevance of those existing instruments [3].

The paper's July 15 account found that renewed blockade enforcement had broken the ceasefire and its 60-day negotiating window; Thursday's official statement did not restore that ceasefire or report new replacement terms, but it corrects any suggestion that the Islamabad framework or June roadmap vanished when fighting resumed [2] [3].

AP identified Qatar and Pakistan as mediators and said talks had broken down over Hormuz, while Pakistan said engagement with regional interlocutors continued and called for a return to the existing formula; that is current diplomatic activity under an old framework, not a newly reported agreement [2] [3].

Trump separately said Tehran had released detained US-Iranian citizen Dena Karari as goodwill, and lawyer Jared Genser identified her as his client and said she had faced an espionage charge; Iran did not acknowledge the release in the audited record, and the Los Angeles Times did not independently confirm that she was outside Iran [1].

No new post-collapse venue, meeting date, replacement Hormuz formula, verification step or end state had been reported by cutoff [1] [2] [3], and no auditable same-day X post established a breakthrough or diplomacy's death, so those social counterframes remain unobserved; the gap concerns new replacement terms, not the existence of the Islamabad MoU or June 22 roadmap, and no post-cutoff development enters this account.

-- YOSEF STERN, Jerusalem

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