Mediators from Qatar and Pakistan completed separate meetings with U.S. and Iranian negotiators in Doha on Wednesday, reporting positive progress on implementing the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding ahead of further discussions after the funeral of Iran’s former supreme leader, according to a Qatari official.
The development follows a ceasefire that put an end to months of direct conflict between the United States and Iran earlier this year.
Qatar’s Foreign Ministry and Pakistani officials said the meetings represented progress from the Lake Lucerne Summit held in Switzerland in June.
Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif played a significant mediating role in the agreement, which represents a step toward the end of active fighting.
Wednesday’s meetings took place shortly after mourning periods over the death of Iran’s longtime supreme leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed in a U.S.-Israeli strike in late February, an event that triggered widespread regional reverberations and celebrations in parts of Iran while prompting retaliatory actions and further strikes.
Qatar, which hosts a major U.S. military base and upholds relationships across the region, and Pakistan, with its own interests at stake, have been facilitating talks to end a conflict centered on Iran’s nuclear program and its funding of terrorist groups in the region.
The next round of talks is likely to happen soon, though no specific date has been announced pending the conclusion of funeral observances.
Regional players, including Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Egypt, have supported the mediation framework.







