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JD Vance Pakistan Peace Talks Canceled as Iran Refuses to Negotiate Under US Naval Blockade

April 22, 2026  |  US Politics  |  Iran Diplomacy  |  International  |  Usanewsreporters.com

Vice President JD Vance’s planned trip to Islamabad, Pakistan, for a second round of US–Iran peace talks has been canceled. This followed Tehran’s signal that it would not enter negotiations while the United States continues its naval blockade of Iranian ports.

A White House official confirmed the cancellation on Tuesday. It marks a setback for the diplomatic track, which had been seen as the most viable path toward ending the conflict now in its eighth week.

Pakistan had invested significant political capital in positioning Islamabad as the venue for the negotiations. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Army Chief Asim Munir personally lobbied Washington and Tehran to resume talks.

The Pakistani leadership also reportedly urged Trump to extend the ceasefire. Trump later cited Pakistan’s appeal in his public remarks, saying it influenced his decision to prolong the truce..

Iran’s position remains firm: it says the blockade is an act of war and incompatible with any genuine ceasefire. Tehran says it will not negotiate under what it describes as a siege.

Foreign Minister Araghchi used strong language this week. Iran’s UN envoy also set a clear condition: negotiations in Islamabad could take place once Washington ends the naval blockade.

The condition keeps a diplomatic channel open in principle, while leaving both sides little room to move without making concessions.

Trump, in a Truth Social post announcing the ceasefire extension, said the Iranian government was deeply divided. He suggested that internal tensions between Tehran’s parliamentary negotiators and the IRGC’s military leadership had prevented Iran from presenting a coherent proposal.

Senior administration officials have privately expressed frustration that there appears to be no single Iranian decision-making authority capable of committing to a deal.

The IRGC’s seizure of two commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday, along with Iran’s renewed restrictions on shipping traffic, appear to signal that Tehran retains escalation options despite its official ceasefire posture.

Analysts in Washington now see a dangerous window forming in which neither side escalates to full conflict nor advances toward peace, a prolonged ambiguity that energy markets, global supply chains, and war-weary populations can ill afford to sustain.

Noah Sterling

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