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Iran Conflict 2026
12APR

Islamabad talks end with no deal reached

2 min read
08:59UTC

Vance departs after two days of negotiations with no agreement, no joint text, and no next meeting.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The ceasefire's negotiation window is running out with nothing behind it.

JD Vance left Islamabad on 12 April after two days of talks at the Serena Hotel, having presented what he called a "final and best offer" . Iran refused to commit to forgoing nuclear weapons. No joint statement was issued, no written agreement produced, and no date set for a next round.

The talks opened on 11 April as proximity negotiations, with Pakistani officials shuttling between the two delegations, before shifting to direct sessions. Both sides exchanged written proposals for the first time, but the paper produced no convergence. Vance told reporters the breakdown was "bad news for Iran much more than for the US."

Three structural deadlocks killed the text: Iran's refusal to forswear nuclear weapons, its refusal to hand over its enriched uranium, and its demand for Hormuz toll-collection authority. Each one alone would have blocked an agreement. Together they left no negotiating space.

The Ceasefire, announced on 7 April, included a negotiation window of two weeks or slightly longer. That window now has no framework, no next venue, and no interlocutor claiming authority to extend it. OFAC's General License U, covered in detail in the sanctions event below, expires in seven days with no Treasury renewal signal issued. The Ceasefire itself expires at the end of the month. Two deadlines, zero framework.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Imagine two people trying to sell a house. One says 'I'll only buy if you accept that I own it outright, no mortgage.' The other says 'I'll only sell if you agree I can rent the downstairs flat forever.' They can't even start writing a contract. That is what happened in Islamabad. The US said Iran must give up its nuclear programme permanently. Iran said the right to nuclear enrichment is non-negotiable. Those two positions cannot be put in the same document. So after 21 hours of talking through intermediaries, the American delegation left. The ceasefire, the agreement to stop shooting, is still technically in place, but it runs out in about ten days. There is now no plan for what happens after that.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The proximity format itself was structurally insufficient: Pakistani officials walking paper messages between delegations cannot bridge a gap that requires both sides to move simultaneously on enrichment and Hormuz without losing domestic standing.

The US delegation's composition (Vance, Witkoff, Kushner) prioritised political loyalty over Iran nuclear expertise. The Arms Control Association assessed this explicitly in March 2026, noting negotiators arrived without the technical depth that the 2015 JCPOA team brought.

Iran's parliamentary delegation composition was itself a domestic signal: sending Ghalibaf alongside Araghchi meant the hardliner bloc had a seat at the table and a veto over any text that moved on enrichment.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    With no next round scheduled and Vance framing his offer as 'final', the US has publicly exhausted its concession space before the 22 April ceasefire expiry, removing the diplomatic path for the remaining ten days.

    Immediate · High
  • Risk

    Iran's state media framing ('US overreach', 'ball in America's court') gives Tehran a pre-built domestic narrative for resuming hostilities that places blame externally, reducing the domestic political cost of walking away.

    Short term · High
  • Precedent

    If the ceasefire collapses without a framework, it establishes that the first direct US-Iran talks since 1979 produced no transferable architecture, making any future negotiation start from scratch rather than building on Islamabad.

    Long term · Medium
First Reported In

Update #66 · Islamabad collapses: 10 days to expiry

Al Jazeera· 12 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
India
India
New Delhi has a national unaccounted for among GFS Galaxy's eleven-strong Indian crew, turning a standoff over transit rights into a consular emergency for a state with no seat at either table.
Oman
Oman
Muscat's 9 July arrangement to jointly manage Hormuz traffic with Iran, outside the frozen US channel, is overridden within days by Tehran's own unilateral closure and strike on GFS Galaxy.
Qatar
Qatar
Doha keeps mediating from an exposed position: Al Udeid hosts the CENTCOM strikes it is trying to broker a stand-down around, a week after a Qatari carrier was itself hit in the strait.
United States / CENTCOM
United States / CENTCOM
CENTCOM flew a third strike wave in a week, roughly 140 targets, killed Lieutenant Dehghani at Jask, and insists the strait remains open. It signed no instrument making that claim enforceable against Iran's closure.
Iran / IRGC
Iran / IRGC
Tehran struck GFS Galaxy and declared Hormuz closed, reasserting IRGC toll authority after its Oman-brokered management track failed to bind Washington to anything. The strike restores unilateral control after days of a negotiated alternative gaining ground.
Russia
Russia
Grossi's non-confirmation came from Kaliningrad, hours after Rosatom, the state agency that built and fuels Bushehr, hosted his talks. A refusal delivered from inside Russia's own nuclear orbit carries weight a Western capital could not manufacture, though Moscow itself made no statement on Iran's strike claim.