Iran, US Narrow Differences After Pakistani Mediation but Splits Remain, Senior Iranian Official Says

DUBAI, April 16 (Reuters) – Iran and ⁠the ⁠United States have made ⁠some progress as they push for an ​agreement under Pakistani mediation, but more than halfway through a ‌two-week truce big splits ‌remain including over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions, a senior ⁠Iranian ⁠official said on Thursday.

“The trip of the Pakistani army ​chief to Tehran was effective in reducing differences in some areas, but fundamental disagreements still remain in the nuclear field…. More ​hopes have been created for extending the ceasefire and ⁠holding a ⁠second round of ⁠talks,” ​the senior official said.

“The fate of Iran’s highly enriched uranium and ​the duration of ⁠Iran’s nuclear restrictions are among the highly disputed issues for which no solution has yet been found.”

Pakistan’s army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir visited Tehran on ⁠Wednesday to try to prevent a renewal of the conflict. ⁠Pakistan hosted the war’s first peace talks last weekend.

A spokesperson for Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry said on Thursday that no dates have been decided for a second round of talks between the U.S. and Iran.

Iran and the United States failed last weekend to agree an end to the war that ⁠U.S. President Donald Trump launched alongside Israel with a surprise attack on February 28, triggering Iranian fire at Gulf states and igniting a parallel conflict ​in Lebanon.

(Reporting by Parisa Hafezi, writing by ​Parisa HafeziEditing by Peter Graff)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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