Pakistan has offered to host U.S.-Iran talks and delivered a 15-point American peace plan to Tehran via its army chief.
Reuters and NBC report Pakistan delivered a U.S. 15-point plan to Iran, with Islamabad offering to host direct talks.
South Asia and defense accounts frame Pakistan's army chief as the critical back-channel between Washington and Tehran.
Pakistan's army chief, General Asim Munir, personally delivered a 15-point American peace plan to Iranian officials during a visit to Tehran this week, according to Reuters [1]. Islamabad has simultaneously offered to host direct U.S.-Iran talks, positioning itself as a neutral venue for negotiations before the operational pause expires Friday.
The 15-point plan reportedly covers the full scope of American demands: dismantlement of Iran's uranium enrichment above 5 percent, limits on ballistic missile development, withdrawal of support for regional proxy forces, and a verifiable inspections regime [2]. In exchange, the U.S. would offer phased sanctions relief and security guarantees. The details were first reported by NBC News, which described the plan as a "comprehensive framework" rather than an ultimatum.
General Munir's involvement is significant. Pakistan shares a 959-kilometer border with Iran, maintains economic ties with Tehran despite U.S. pressure, and has cultivated military-to-military contacts with both sides [1]. Islamabad's pitch to Washington reportedly emphasized that Pakistan is one of the few countries with working relationships across all parties — Iran, the Gulf states, and the United States.
Whether Tehran will engage remains uncertain. Iranian officials have publicly rejected direct talks and privately told mediators they have been "tricked twice" by Trump. Pakistan's offer may represent the last viable channel before the pause deadline passes.
-- PRIYA SHARMA, Mumbai