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#美伊二轮谈判进展
Today marks my 667th day of writing dynamic posts, and every one of them is not done halfheartedly, but is carefully prepared. If you think I’m a serious person, you can walk with me, and I also hope the content each day can help you. The world is big, while I am small. Tap follow so you won’t have trouble finding me.
With only the last day left until the expiration of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire agreement, and with progress on the second round of talks—at present—still shrouded in fog, there is still no clear picture. U.S. President Trump has unilaterally announced that meetings will be held in Islamabad; the U.S. delegation has already arrived on site, and Vice President Vance is leading the team and overseeing the situation. However, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Baghae asserted clearly that, at this time, there are no plans for a second round of negotiations with the United States, and he accused the U.S. of excessive demands and that a maritime blockade is hindering the negotiation process.
What is even more worrying is that, just as diplomatic efforts are being pushed forward with great difficulty, on the 19th, the U.S. military used force to intercept an Iranian cargo ship in the Gulf of Oman, causing the maritime standoff to escalate abruptly and casting a heavy, thick shadow over an already fragile diplomatic situation. Although Iran has stated it is willing to continue negotiations, the condition is that it will not “spare any cost,” and it has already made two-pronged preparations for the possibility of war being reignited. What exactly the prospects for the talks are—whether it will mean a return to dialogue or another standoff—may be revealed within the next several tens of hours.