US, Iranian delegations leave Pakistan without peace deal., Both sides attempting to hold each other responsible for the collapse of the negotiations.
SLAMABAD :
THE US and Iran failed to reach
a peace deal at their historic 21-
hour talks in Pakistan, leaving the
fateoa tenuous two-week cease fire in doubt, with both sides
attempting to hold each other
responsible for the collapse of the
negotiations.
Vice President JD Vance, who
led the US delegationat the negotiations in Islamabad, said the
Iranian side did not accept
Washington’s terms for ending
the war even as the US presented its “final and best offer”. He
indicated that Tehran’s reluctance to abandon its nuclear programme was one of the key sticking points.
Iranian Parliament Speaker
Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf,
the head of the Iranian team,
said it is for the US to decide
whether it can“earn our trust or
not”.
The Iranian foreign ministry,
without elaborating, said the US
side resorted to “excessive” and
“illegal demands”
The failure to reach an agreement has dimmed the prospect
of reopening the Strait of Hormuz
to stabilise the global energy market. It is unclear whether the US
will resume military operations
against Iran. “We have been at it
now for 21 hours. We’ve had a
number of substantive discussions with the Iranians, that’s the
good news,”Vance said at apress
conference before departing
from the Pakistani capital.
“The bad news is that we have
not reached an agreement and I
think that’s bad news for Iran
much more than it’s bad news
for the United States of America.”
“But the simple fact is that we
need to see an affirmative commitment that they will not seek
a nuclear weapon and they will
not seek the tools that would
enable them to quickly achieve
a nuclear weapon,” he said.
To aquestion on Iran’s nuclear
programme, Vance said the US
President Donald Trump’s “core
goal” is to stop Iran from having nuclear weapons.
“That is the core goal of the
President of the United States.
And that’s what we’ve tried to
achieve through these negotiations,” he added. The US Vice
President said the American
side presented its “final and
best offer” to the Iranian side
but it did not accept it. “We just
could not get to a situation
where the Iranians would
accept our terms,” he said.
“We leave here with a very
simple proposal, a method of
understanding that this is our
final and best offer. We’ll see if
the Iranians accept it,” Vance
said.
The Iranian media reported
the talks collapsed after negotiators failed to bridge gaps
regarding Iran’s nuclear programme, control over the Strait
of Hormuz, and release of
frozen Iranian assets.
In a social media post,
Ghalibaf said the Iranian side
raised “forward-looking initiatives,” but the opposing side
“ultimately failed to gain the
trust of the Iranian delegation
in this round of negotiations.”
“We consider every mirror to
be another method of authority diplomacy, along side military struggle, for up holding the
rights of the Iranian nation,
and we will not for a moment
cease our efforts to consolidate
the achievements of the forty
days of Iran’s national defence,”
he said.
The Iranian foreign ministry
said the success of the “diplomatic process depends on the
seriousness and good will of the
other side, and refraining
from excessive and illegal
demands”.
Iran foreign ministry
spoke sman Esmaeil Baqaei
said issues like the transit
through Strait of Hormuz created some hurdles in the talks.
“These talks happened in the
aftermath of a 40-day war and
in an ambience of mistrust and
skepticism,” Baqaei said,
according to Iran’s state-run
IRNA news agency.