Its breakthrough in any case. Bringing them to talk is itself step towards realization.
Posturing will continue-more importantly .. so will diplomacy!
War has come as an eye-opener, failing estimates, unfolding real.Agreed Order has to be defined that is mutually realistic🤞🏼
JD Vance’s signal that there’s “no deal” after the first round of U.S.–Iran talks reflects the structural deadlock: Washington is pushing for verifiable limits on enrichment and regional de-escalation, while Tehran is holding firm on sanctions relief and strategic autonomy. The gap was always going to be wide. The first round was less about agreement and more about testing red lines.
But this is diplomacy, not a one-shot negotiation.
The alternative to continued talks is far more consequential. A collapse risks escalation in an already volatile region, sustained energy shocks, and a feedback loop into global inflation and financial instability. Markets, supply chains, and vulnerable economies would all take the hit. No serious actor can afford that outcome.
Which is why talks will resume. They have to.
And in all this, Pakistan has quietly delivered a strategic win. By bringing Washington and Tehran into the same diplomatic space and opening a credible channel, it has shifted from the margins to the table at a critical geopolitical moment. Outcomes remain uncertain, but the fact of engagement itself is a durable achievement.
In a fragmented world, creating the conditions for dialogue is no small feat.