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Last Updated:May 22, 2026, 00:04 IST
Dar said that Islamabad successfully mediated backchannel peace talks between the United States and Iran after a diplomatic freeze lasting 47 years

Pakistan Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar (centre) meets leaders in Bangladesh. (File image: Ishaq Dar/X)
Pakistan Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar on Thursday declared that Islamabad’s bilateral relations with Bangladesh are “advancing with warmth", anchoring the relationship within a broader trans-regional alignment of “excellent relations" that includes China, Azerbaijan, and Turkey. Speaking authoritatively at the closing ceremony of a global training programme in the federal capital, Dar delivered a comprehensive overview of Pakistan’s current foreign policy doctrine, heavily emphasising a structural transition towards multilateral diplomacy, strict adherence to international pacts, and high-stakes global conflict mediation.
Dar said that Islamabad successfully mediated backchannel peace talks between the United States and Iran after a diplomatic freeze lasting 47 years. He confirmed that these high-security interventions directly made a ceasefire possible between Washington and Tehran, pulling the critical energy corridors of West Asia back from the brink of unmitigated regional war. He reiterated that Pakistan is maintaining its active diplomatic pipelines to ensure a sustainable, long-term resolution to the volatile conflict.
How is Islamabad Restructuring Its Eurasian Alliances?
The core of the minister’s address focused on calculated realignments of Pakistan’s traditional and emerging partnerships. Decoupling from singular geopolitical dependencies, Islamabad is actively cementing an administrative axis spanning East Asia, the Caucasus, and the Mediterranean. Dar explicitly noted that Pakistan’s doors “will always remain open" for the citizens of friendly nations, framing international agreements as the ultimate guarantee of global peace.
What Is the Current Strategy Behind CPEC and the Southern Front?
Detailing the long-term evolution of the multi-billion-dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) as Beijing and Islamabad commemorate 75 years of bilateral diplomatic relations, Dar asserted that the corridor has transcended its original identity as a basic infrastructure and transport layout. Under the modern CPEC framework, both nations have established an extensive, long-term legal partnership alongside deep economic integration, effectively insulating the strategic corridor against domestic political shifts.
Simultaneously, the explicit inclusion of Dhaka in Pakistan’s tier of premium bilateral partners underscores a significant shift in South Asian diplomacy. By officially categorising ties with Bangladesh as “advancing with warmth", the foreign policy apparatus is pushing to move past historical bottlenecks to foster fresh economic, maritime, and youth exchanges. Furthermore, Dar highlighted that Pakistan’s ties with Azerbaijan remain firmly established on robust bilateral foundations, matching a unified stance on regional trade security with growing defence and energy cooperation.
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