Iran to lower uranium enrichment level at home, says Ishaq Dar

Updated 23 Jun, 2026 01:24pm 4 min read

Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Senator Ishaq Dar has said that Iran would reduce the level of its uranium enrichment domestically instead of transferring its enriched uranium stockpile abroad.

In an interview with an Arab media outlet, Dar stated that three technical working groups would now address the nuclear file, frozen assets and issues related to Lebanon.

The Pakistani minister said the United States had initially sought the removal of Iran’s enriched uranium reserves from the country, but the two sides had reached an understanding under which Tehran would decrease enrichment levels while keeping the material in its own country.

He said the issue could be finalised during a meeting of one of the technical working groups.

Dar also said vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz would be allowed to transit without tariffs for 60 days and would only be required to pay standard navigation or service fees.

He added that China supported the arrangement.

The foreign minister said US President Donald Trump had personally overseen negotiations between Washington and Tehran, while Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates were supporting mediation efforts.

According to Dar, Iran had expressed satisfaction with the process.

Dar predicted that the next phase of negotiations could prove more difficult but said a final agreement remained achievable.

“There is no negative point in the deal,” he said.

Dar said that Pakistan’s diplomatic efforts have succeeded in bringing the US and Iran to the negotiating table despite recent regional escalations that threatened to derail the process, as the spoilers never wanted this deal to happen.

In an interview with Al Arabiya English, Dar said that the Burgenstock talks could have started a few days earlier, but Israel’s attacks on Lebanon actually derailed everything and stopped everything.

He described the heavy bombing in Lebanon immediately following the signing of the MoU as a clear provocation by spoilers intending to make the parties pause.

He told the interviewer that the diplomatic breakthrough followed an intensive 21-hour marathon session of direct talks between the US and Iran in Islamabad on April 10 and 11 — marking their first direct dialogue in 47 years.

He said that the framework outlined a 30-day timeline to conclude certain technical items, with a 60-day overall timeline to finalise the bulk of the comprehensive deal, mutually extendable by consent.

“It is a very well-thought-out document, acceptable to both parties,” he said.

He said that a key component of the agreement guaranteed the unhindered resumption of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz and that Pakistan’s position remained firm that conditions must fully return to the status quo prior to February 28, when the conflict erupted.

“Our understanding is that there should be nothing —no government interference, no fees, no tolls, and no service charges,” Dar stated, noting that a common five-point proposal he previously discussed with the Foreign Minister of China in Beijing, as well as subsequent White House statements, backed a fee-free transit zone.

Dar highlighted that the conflict disrupted global energy supply chains and triggered inflation, resulting in an estimated loss of 20% to 25% of global GDP.

It also heavily affected Pakistan, forcing the government to provide billions of rupees in temporary subsidies before passing the relief directly back to consumers as global prices stabilised.

“We have already seen the dividends of this peace,” he said.

“The prices of energy have come down, the ships have started moving.”

Reflecting on the unprecedented diplomatic mobilisation, Dar said that while he spoke with counterparts in 61 countries during the India-Pakistan war last year, he had engaged in over 150 diplomatic communications since February 28 to resolve the US-Iran conflict.

Dar said that throughout the process, Pakistan kept regional allies connected, leading to the creation of the “R4” consultative forum alongside Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey, while coordinating closely with Gulf nations like Qatar and international partners including China and the EU.

He said that during recent ministerial consultations, Pakistan, Egypt, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia also agreed to reactivate the Group of Eight Arab-Islamic countries to revive focus on the Gaza-Palestine issue and the West Bank, which had been overshadowed by the immediate US-Iran crisis.

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