'Pakistan is pleased that both Iran and the United States have expressed their confidence in Pakistan's facilitation of the talks,' said Ishaq Dar in a televised speech.
The foreign minister did not go into detail about whether the talks will be direct or indirect. So far, there has been no reaction from the American or Iranian sides.
Ishaq Dar made the statements after Sunday's meetings in Pakistan's capital Islamabad - which also extend through Monday - with the foreign ministers of Turkey, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, where talks about reaching an end to the war involving Iran were at the top of the agenda.
Dar says the other foreign ministers support Pakistan's peace efforts.
Ahead of the talks, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif was reported to have held "detailed discussions" about the war with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian.
Pakistan has taken an increasingly central role in the negotiations to end the war. Pakistani negotiators have been passing messages between Iran and the United States, including a 15-point American peace plan the White House is said to have drawn up. The plan has been rejected by Iran.





