Pakistani Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said on Wednesday 6 May that Islamabad has 'continuously engaged both Iran and the United States' and 'helped bring both sides to the negotiating table for direct talks for the first time in 47 years' 1. Abbas Araghchi confirmed the same morning that talks are 'progressing with Pakistan's gracious effort'. The four-topic structure of the channel is now publicly confirmed by Dar: freedom of navigation through Hormuz, Iran's nuclear and ballistic programmes, reconstruction and sanctions lifting, and a long-term peace agreement.
The four topics are the broadest public characterisation of the channel scope to date and confirm the agenda Pakistan has been carrying since Tehran first acknowledged receipt of the US written reply on 3 May . Dar's phrasing, 'first time in 47 years', anchors the channel against the 1979 hostage crisis as the date of last bilateral contact and stakes Pakistan's diplomatic credit on the precedent. Iran originally delivered its 14-point document through the same channel before Trump verbally rejected it ; the four-topic agenda is the surviving structure of that exchange.
What the channel has not produced is the verbatim US written reply that Iran first acknowledged on 3 May. The text remains unpublished. Across the four-round exchange, Iran has filed the texts; Washington has filed nothing comparable. The Pakistan channel is sustaining the form of negotiation while Iran builds the institutional facts, sovereignty law, regulatory authority, ratified toll regime, that will outlast the channel itself.
