April 10 Islamabad Talks

Overview

The April 10 Islamabad Talks were the first direct US–Iran negotiations following the April 7, 2026 provisional ceasefire. Held in Islamabad, Pakistan, the talks represented a critical diplomatic juncture in the effort to extend and formalize the ceasefire and restore Strait of Hormuz flows.

Iranian Delegation and Demands

Iran's delegation, led by Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, presented a 10-point demand list:

  1. Full lifting of US sanctions
  2. Preservation of Iranian control over the Strait of Hormuz
  3. Agreement to limit uranium enrichment to 3.67% in exchange for access to frozen assets abroad

The demand for preserving Iranian control over the strait was a significant point — it meant that even in a normalization scenario, Iran sought to entrench its geostrategic position regarding the waterway carrying approximately 20% of global oil supply.

US Position

President Trump signaled willingness to ease sanctions in exchange for Iranian concessions, posting on Truth Social: "We are, and will be, talking Tariff and Sanctions relief with Iran."

However, experts assessed that any sanctions relief would be gradual and tied to compliance on nuclear and other commitments.

Soufan Center Assessment

The Soufan Center noted that Tehran entered the talks seeking to cement strategic gains achieved during the conflict. The Center assessed that Tehran believed Trump would not risk collapse of the truce given the economic and political costs of allowing Hormuz flows to remain disrupted.

Outcome

The talks set the stage for continued negotiation but did not produce a definitive resolution. The two-week ceasefire window remained the operative framework, with markets closely watching for signals on whether Hormuz flows would actually resume.

References

Bibliography

Compiled from oil-shock-monitor-kb daily briefs and institutional sources.

Source Attribution

Internal KB analysis and daily brief compilation.