
By Asghar Ali Mubarak
Pakistan’s bold diplomatic gambit in the shadow of escalating Iran-US tensions offers a rare glimmer of hope amid the rubble of ruptured alliances and missile strikes. As bombs fall and ultimatums fly, Islamabad is positioning itself not as a bystander but as a potential fulcrum for peace, ready to host talks between bitter adversaries if they consent. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has framed this as a point of national pride, underscoring Pakistan’s readiness to facilitate meaningful negotiations for a comprehensive settlement. In a region where diplomacy often feels like a relic, this fast-footed outreach—marked by frantic phone calls from Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar to counterparts in Iran, Turkey, Iraq, Egypt, and the UAE—signals a nation eager to claim the mantle of “center of peace.”
Sharif’s phone call with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on Sunday captured the urgency. He urged an immediate de-escalation and resolution through dialogue with neighbors, assuring Tehran of Pakistan’s constructive role. Dar echoed this in conversations that stressed collective efforts, adherence to international law, and the perils of further instability. With Iraq’s Fuad Hussein, he voiced deep concern over regional tremors; with Turkey’s Hakan Fidan, they reviewed a fragile US-announced ceasefire; Iran’s Abbas Araghchi heard pleas for diplomacy; and UAE’s Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed received condolences for lost lives, including three Pakistanis, alongside calls for de-escalation. These aren’t mere courtesies—they weave a web of regional buy-in, even as a reported chat between army chief Asim Munir and US President Donald Trump hints at backchannel momentum. Whispers suggest US envoys like JD Vance, Steve Witkoff, and Jared Kushner might grace Islamabad next week, though Washington and Tehran have yet to confirm.
Yet this peacemaking unfolds against a backdrop of chaos that defies easy narratives. Trump boasts of “positive” talks with Iran, only for Tehran to deny them outright. His 48-hour ultimatum to reopen the Strait of Hormuz—threatening to “destroy” power plants—drew Iranian vows of retaliation, including mines in the Gulf. Hours before his deadline, Trump blinked, posting on Truth Social about “productive” exchanges and a five-day moratorium on energy strikes. Oil markets dipped cautiously, but the reprieve feels tenuous. Who holds the reins in Tehran? Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, key Revolutionary Guards commanders, and top brass lie dead from relentless strikes that have gutted missile centers and command structures. Rumors swirl around Mojtaba Khamenei, the reported survivor and successor, but his silence—limited to two written missives—breeds uncertainty in a system wired for centralized control. President Pezeshkian lurks in the shadows, his earlier apologies to neighbors reportedly irking hardliners.
Iran’s resilience stuns. Missiles streaked 3,800 kilometers toward the US-British Diego Garcia base, shattering assumptions of a 2,000-kilometre limit—proof that pressure hasn’t halted technological leaps. Strikes hit Dimona, 13 kilometers from Israel’s shrouded Negev nuclear complex, retaliation for assaults on Bushehr and Natanz. IAEA chief Rafael Grossi decries attacks near atomic sites; no radiation spikes reported, but Israel’s ambulance services tallied dozens wounded, including a boy in critical condition. Dimona, long an “open secret” for undeclared nukes, embodies Jerusalem’s deliberate ambiguity—a policy Shimon Peres once hailed as a deterrent shrouded in doubt. For the US and Israel, whose “shock and awe” aimed to decapitate decision-making, the strategy falters: Iran’s responses smack of coordination, not collapse.
This impasse traps both sides. Air power inflicts pain but can’t force surrender without boots on the ground, risking Hormuz’s chokehold and blackouts for 170 million souls. Iran, battered by sanctions and unrest, rallies domestically through defiance, yet escalation courts catastrophe. Past nuclear talks in Geneva and Vienna crumbled into strikes, teaching Tehran that dialogue invites doom. Trump’s shrinking runway mirrors Iran’s: neither can retreat without appearing weak. Enter Pakistan, threading this needle with discretion. Its Foreign Office urges media restraint on unconfirmed details, true to a policy of quiet diplomacy in Middle East maelstroms.
Even German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, marking his nation’s foreign ministry centenary, lambasts the US-Israeli campaign as illegal, lamenting shattered transatlantic trust. “We cannot call violations anything but violations,” he insists, evoking Ukraine’s shadow. Pakistan’s pitch resonates because it straddles worlds: Muslim-majority, nuclear-armed, scarred by its own militancy, yet pragmatic. Hosting talks could burnish its global stature, heal economy-strangling tensions, and avert a wider inferno. But success hinges on Iran’s elusive leadership surfacing and Trump’s impulses yielding to reason. For now, Islamabad’s hurry embodies a human truth: in war’s frenzy, one steady hand might steady the rest. The region—and the world—watches, breathless.
(The writer is a senior journalist covering various beats, can be reached at editorial@metro-morning.com)


