Iran War
Live Updates: Trump Calls Off Witkoff and Kushner’s Travel to Pakistan for
Peace Talks
Luke
Broadwater
April 25,
2026, 12:56 p.m. ET2 hours ago
Luke
Broadwater
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/04/25/world/iran-war-us-talks-pakistan
Trump
cancels aides’ trip for Iran talks, saying, ‘We have all the cards.’
President
Trump on Saturday called off a trip by two of his top negotiators to Islamabad,
Pakistan, just before they were set to leave for talks about a potential deal
to end the war in Iran.
“I’ve
told my people a little while ago, they were getting ready to leave, and I
said, ‘Nope, you’re not making an 18-hour flight to go there. We have all the
cards,’” Mr. Trump said in a statement. “They can call us anytime they want,
but you’re not going to be making any more 18-hour flights to sit around
talking about nothing.”
Steve
Witkoff, the special envoy, and Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law, had
been scheduled to travel to Pakistan on Saturday, along with top aides to Vice
President JD Vance. Officials in Pakistan have been mediating between the
United States and Iran to try to end more than a month of war in the Middle
East.
The
cancellation of the trip is the latest sign that Iran and the United States are
far from reaching a deal to end the war. A previous trip to Islamabad by Mr.
Vance proved unsuccessful, and the Americans appear no closer to achieving the
administration’s political goals, including convincing Iran to turn over its
nuclear stockpile and curtail its future program. The two sides are also locked
in a stalemate over control of the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of
the world’s oil supply flows.
Mr.
Trump’s decision came after Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, who had
been in Islamabad for talks with Pakistani officials, left the country and
traveled to Oman. No direct meetings had
been scheduled with U.S. officials.
After
leaving Islamabad, Mr. Araghchi said in a social media post that he had shared
with Pakistani officials Iran’s position on a “workable framework to
permanently end the war on Iran.” He did not give details of the latest
proposal. “Have yet to see if the U.S. is truly serious about diplomacy,” he
added.
Earlier
this week, Mr. Trump unilaterally extended a cease-fire between the United
States and Iran that was about to expire, saying he wanted to give Tehran a
chance to come up with a new proposal to end the war.
In a
Truth Social post on his decision, the president repeated his contention that
the Iranian government was divided and argued those disagreements were
complicating talks. “There is tremendous infighting and confusion within their
‘leadership,’” he said. “Nobody knows who is in charge including them.” Several
top Iranian officials put out statements on Thursday denying the country’s
leaders were divided.
The
United States recently transmitted a written proposal to the Iranians intended
to establish points of agreement that could frame more detailed negotiations.
The document covers a broad range of issues, but the core sticking points are
the same ones that have bedeviled Western negotiators for more than a decade:
the scope of Iran’s uranium enrichment program and the fate of its stockpile of
enriched uranium.
The
American military has displayed its overwhelming might during the war,
successfully striking thousands of targets. But Iran’s theocratic regime, even
after its top leaders were killed, has remained in power and has asserted tight control over the Strait of
Hormuz, limiting shipping, driving up the price of oil and shaking the world
economy.

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