Iran's negotiating team conditions any further diplomacy on the lifting of what Tehran characterises as an illegal maritime siege — as an IRGC naval skirmish with US forces compounds the standoff Iran has formally declined to commit to a second round of nuclear and diplomatic negotiations with the United States, conditioning any further talks on the prior lifting of what it describes as an illegal American naval blockade of its ports and coastline. The announcement, relayed through Iranian state and semi-state media on Sunday, marks a significant hardening of Tehran's public posture following the collapse of the first negotiating round, which was brokered through Pakistani mediation. According to Tasnim News Agency, which carries close ties to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), back-channel message exchanges between Tehran and Washington have continued in recent days via Islamabad as intermediary — a process Tehran frames as a continuation of talks that failed due to...
Washington and Tehran are heading back to the Pakistani capital for a new round of negotiations, as the ceasefire teeters on expiry and Iran keeps its grip on the Strait of Hormuz. Sources close to The Levant Files warn that optimism in official circles far outpaces reality on the ground. With the clock ticking on a fragile two-week ceasefire set to expire on April 22, the United States and Iran are heading back to Islamabad for a second round of high-stakes negotiations. President Donald Trump announced on Sunday that Vice President JD Vance, special envoy Steve Witkoff, and senior adviser Jared Kushner would travel to the Pakistani capital — the same delegation that presided over last weekend's marathon but inconclusive talks at the Serena Hotel. The announcement came wrapped in characteristic Trumpian bluster. In a post on Truth Social, the President issued what analysts described as a barely veiled war crime threat: "I hope they take it because, if they don't, the Unit...