Business Recorder
DUBAI/TEL AVIV: Pakistan has delivered a proposal from the United States to Iran, and either Pakistan or Turkiye could be venues for discussions to de-escalate the war in the Gulf, a senior Iranian official told Reuters on Wednesday. The comments, by an official speaking on condition of anonymity, were among the few signs that Tehran was willing to consider diplomatic proposals, despite having denied in public that it would negotiate with the administration of President Donald Trump. The Iranian source did not disclose details of the proposal passed on by Pakistan, or whether it was the same as a 15-point US proposal that has been reported by news outlets including Reuters . The source said Turkiye had also “helped to end the war and either Turkiye or Pakistan was under consideration as the venue for such talks”. Oil prices fell and battered shares recovered on Wednesday after reports that the US had sent the 15-point plan to Iran, with investors hoping for an end to nearly four weeks of war that has killed thousands and disrupted global energy supplies. A source familiar with the matter had confirmed on Tuesday to Reuters that the plan had been sent to Iran. Three Israeli cabinet sources said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s security cabinet had been briefed on the proposal, which they said includes removing Iran’s stocks of highly enriched uranium, halting enrichment, curbing its ballistic missile programme, and ending funding for regional allies. Meanwhile, the Pentagon is planning to send thousands of airborne troops to the Gulf to give Trump more options to order a ground assault, sources have told Reuters , adding to two contingents of Marines already on their way. The first Marine Expeditionary Unit aboard a huge amphibious assault ship could arrive around the end of the month. Turkiye playing a role passing messages Iran’s neighbour Pakistan has already offered to host talks to be attended by senior US officials as soon as this week. A senior ruling party official in Turkiye, Harun Armagan, told Reuters on Wednesday that Ankara was “playing a role passing messages” between Iran and the US. But so far there has been no public recognition from Iran that it is willing to negotiate at all, while its assertions that it would not do so have become increasingly caustic. “Has the level of your inner struggle reached the stage of you negotiating with yourself?” the top spokesperson for Iran’s joint military command, Ebrahim Zolfaqari, taunted Trump in comments on Iranian state TV. “People like us can never get along with people like you,” he said. “As we have always said … no one like us will make a deal with you. Not now. Not ever.” Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson, Esmail Beghaei, appearing on television in India, noted that nuclear talks had already been under way when Trump attacked, which he called “a betrayal of diplomacy” that made further talks pointless. There are “no talks or negotiations between Iran and the United States”, he said. “No one can trust United States diplomacy. Our position is clear on what they have claimed. Right now our brave military is focused on defending Iran’s territory and sovereignty against this brutal and illegal war.” A senior Israeli defence official said Israel was sceptical Iran would agree to the terms, and that Israel was concerned that the terms were only starting points for negotiations, during which US negotiators might make concessions. Trump’s softer stance soothes markets A source familiar with Israel’s war plans said Israel wanted any US-Iranian agreement to preserve Israel’s option to conduct pre-emptive strikes. Trump, who early in the war had said it would end only with Tehran’s “unconditional surrender” and his choosing Iran’s leaders, has abruptly changed tack this week, declaring that “productive” talks had been under way for days with unspecified Iranian officials. His softer stance, which included abruptly postponing a threat to escalate the bombing by attacking Iran’s civilian energy system, caused a respite in financial markets, which have see-sawed but largely stabilised since Monday. But Iran has consistently maintained that no such talks have taken place, and derided Trump’s announcement as an attempt to buy time and placate the markets. Strikes on Iran, Israel Nearly four weeks into the war that has killed thousands, there was no let-up in air attacks against Iran, or in Iranian drone and missile strikes against Israel and US allies. The Israeli military said in a Telegram post it had launched a wave of strikes targeting infrastructure across Tehran. It later said its air force had struck two naval cruise missile production sites in Tehran. The semi-official Iranian SNN News Agency said the strikes hit a residential area in the city, with rescuers searching the rubble. Kuwait and Saudi Arabia said they had repelled fresh drone attacks. Drones targeted a fuel tank at Kuwait International Airport, causing a fire but no casualties, Kuwait’s Civil Aviation Authority said. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they had launched a new wave of attacks against locations in Israel, including Tel Aviv and Kiryat Shmona, as well as US bases in Kuwait, Jordan and Bahrain, Iranian state media reported. Since the start of “Operation Epic Fury” by the US in February, Iran has attacked countries that host US bases and effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, conduit for a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas. Iran has told the United Nations Security Council and the International Maritime Organisation that “non-hostile vessels” may transit the Strait of Hormuz if they coordinate with Iranian authorities. In practice, however, only Iran’s own oil and a handful of ships from friendly countries have made it through.
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