Pakistan's Army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir spoke to Trump on Monday. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif called Iranian President Pezeshkian and wrote that Pakistan "stands ready and honoured" to facilitate talks. An Israeli official told NPR that planning was under way for talks in Islamabad "later this week" 1. Egypt, Oman, and Turkey are also confirmed as intermediaries — four countries NOW competing to host negotiations that Iran formally denies are happening .
Pakistan brings specific assets to the role. It shares a roughly 900-kilometre border with Iran through Balochistan, maintains diplomatic relations with Washington, Tehran, and Riyadh, and is a nuclear-armed state — a status that carries weight in discussions about Iran's nuclear programme. Field Marshal Munir has cultivated close ties with Saudi Arabia's leadership; that dual access to The Gulf Arab camp and to Tehran is Pakistan's core diplomatic offering. Mediators have already used Pakistani channels — CNN reported the US shared its 15-point list of expectations with Iran via Pakistan 2.
The crowded field contrasts sharply with historical precedent. The back-channel that produced the 2015 JCPOA ran exclusively through Oman over two years of quiet bilateral diplomacy. The current scramble — four countries operating simultaneously, no agreed format, no confirmed venue — more closely resembles crisis improvisation than structured negotiation.
Oman's established track record as a US-Iran conduit, Egypt's weight as the Arab world's most populous state, and Turkey's 2010 experience brokering a nuclear fuel swap alongside Brazil each represent distinct diplomatic traditions. That all four are offering at once suggests none has exclusive access to both parties. Whether talks materialise in Islamabad this week will determine whether any mediator can convert public gestures into a functioning channel — or whether the 82nd Airborne's deployment overtakes diplomacy entirely.
