Iran's Foreign Ministry stated after the talks that "the two sides agreed on a number of points" without specifying which. Its spokesperson added: "Diplomacy never comes to an end." The language was conciliatory, leaving the door open to further rounds.
Fars News Agency, which is close to the IRGC, ran a harder line: "Iran is in no hurry, and until the US agrees to a reasonable deal, there will be no change in the status of the Strait of Hormuz." Iranian state television described the session as "the third round of negotiations," a framing that implies two prior sessions were held without being publicly acknowledged.
The two messages serve different audiences. The Foreign Ministry's tone is aimed outward, at Pakistan, the EU, and other mediators who need a signal that further talks are possible. Fars News speaks inward and to the IRGC's own constituency: the strait stays closed, Iran holds the leverage, there is no urgency. Parliament speaker Ghalibaf had already codified three ceasefire violations and two preconditions before arriving in Islamabad , setting the rhetorical floor below which no Iranian official can go without facing domestic blowback.
The "third round" claim is the most interesting detail. If two prior rounds occurred before the 11 April public opening at the Serena Hotel, they were conducted without any non-Iranian source reporting them. That would mean the Islamabad format had been tested in secret before it was unveiled, and it still failed.
