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Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif.
Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif. © Getty Images via Andrew Harnik, AFP

From the show

Access Asia

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On this week’s Access Asia we look at how Pakistan has emerged as a key mediator to end the war in Iran. The Atlantic Council’s Michael Kugelman tells us the conflict spillover risks are particularly acute, adding that Pakistan badly wants to avoid getting dragged into the war.

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Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif.
Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif. © Getty Images via Andrew Harnik, AFP

From the show

Access Asia


Reading time
1 min

On this week’s Access Asia we look at how Pakistan has emerged as a key mediator to end the war in Iran. The Atlantic Council’s Michael Kugelman tells us the conflict spillover risks are particularly acute, adding that Pakistan badly wants to avoid getting dragged into the war.

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Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) urged civilians across the Middle East on Friday to stay away from areas near US forces, ramping up its threats despite President Donald Trump’s claim that talks to end the month-long war were “going well”.

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The IRGC’s warning came after Trump again extended a deadline for Tehran to open the Strait of Hormuz or face the destruction of its energy assets, pushing it from Friday to 6 April.

Trump said he did so at Tehran’s request, insisting the Islamic Republic wanted “to make a deal” to end the war engulfing the region since 28 February.

But Tehran, which has made it clear it wants to end fighting on its own terms, indicated no let-up in reprisal attacks against Israel and targets across the Gulf.

“We recommend that you urgently leave locations where American forces are stationed so that no harm comes to you,” the IRGC said — hours after Iran’s military threatened to target hotels housing US soldiers across the region.

The warning came as Kuwait said its main commercial port was damaged in a drone attack at dawn.

The elite IRGC paramilitary, responsible directly to the ayatollah, also said on their Sepah News website that the Strait of Hormuz was “closed” to vessels travelling to and from enemy ports and that it had turned back three ships seeking to cross the transit point.

Holding the global economy hostage

Oil prices and stocks were mixed Friday after Trump again pushed back his ultimatum for Iran to lift its choke on Hormuz shipping, which has sent energy prices soaring and threatens lasting damage to the global economy.

In the latest sign of the fallout, a Japanese official said the government plans to temporarily lift restrictions on coal-fired power plants to face the energy crunch, while Vietnam temporarily waived a fuel tax.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio was in France on Friday for talks with his G7 counterparts, with UK Foreign Minister Yvette Cooper calling for a “swift” resolution to the war and an end to Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

“Iran cannot be able to just hold the global economy hostage,” Cooper said ahead of the meeting.

Trump’s reprieve over Hormuz capped days of conflicting signals on peace talks with Tehran, but his special envoy Steve Witkoff spoke Thursday of “strong signs” that it was ready to negotiate.

Negotiations revolve around a 15-point US “action list”, relayed via Pakistan, to which Tehran has reportedly replied — and is awaiting a response.

Iran’s Tasnim news agency said Tehran was demanding war reparations and respect for its “sovereignty” over the Strait of Hormuz.

Tehran also called for an end to US and Israeli attacks on Iran as well as on proxy groups in the region, the report said — a reference to Lebanon’s Hezbollah militants, among others.

Local media confirmed fresh strikes in the Iranian capital Friday, as well as the city of Qom further south, and in Urmia in the northwest, after Israel’s military announced “wide-scale” hits on infrastructure in Tehran.

The new attacks came a day after Israel’s opposition leader Yair Lapid warned the war was taking too high a toll, with the military “stretched to the limit and beyond.”

IDF spokesman Effie Defrin said more combat soldiers were needed to establish a “defensive” buffer zone in southern Lebanon — drawn into the fighting after Hezbollah fired rockets at Israel.

Lebanese state media reported a new airstrike on Beirut’s southern suburbs on Friday, while Hezbollah said it had launched rockets at northern Israel, where air raid sirens sent residents to shelters.

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Federal US law enforcement has foiled a plot to assassinate New York-based Palestinian American activist Nerdeen Kiswani.

Kiswani wrote in post on X that late on Thursday, the FBI joint terrorism taskforce informed her that a plot against her life was “about to” take place, and that agents had conducted an operation in Hoboken, New Jersey, in connection to it.

A federal law enforcement official and an attorney for Kiswani told the New York Times that the FBI said one or more people had been arrested in connection to an imminent attempt on her life. They reportedly did not identify the suspects or their motive.

The FBI and Kiswani did not immediately respond to requests for comment from the Guardian.

“For months, Zionist organizations like Betar and politicians like Randy Fine have encouraged violence against my family and me,” she added on X. “I will have more to say as additional details come to light. I will not stop speaking up for the people of Palestine. Thank you for your support.”

Kiswani recently sued the far-right pro-Israel group Betar. Eric Lee, an attorney representing Kiswani in the case , did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In the lawsuit, which was filed in federal court last month, Kiswani accused the group of stalking and harassment, including social media “bounties”.

“For years, Betar USA stalked & harassed me even offering $1,800 for someone to hand me a beeper while I was pregnant,” Kiswani wrote on X at the time.

The group recently ceased its New York operations as part of a settlement with Letitia James, the attorney general whose office investigated the group and found that it had engaged in “bias-motivated assaults, threats and harassment targeting Muslim, Arab, Palestinian and Jewish New Yorkers”.

In a social media post commenting on the foiled plot, Betar wrote, “violent terrorist Nerdeen Kiswani wants to globalize the intifada not surprising if other terrorists targeted her”.

Randy Fine, a Republican representative of Florida whom Kiswani also referenced in her post, has made repeated Islamophobic remarks, and has previously singled out Kiswani.

Kiswani, who was born in Jordan and has been living in the US since she was a young child, is the founder of Within Our Lifetime, a pro-Palestinian group that’s been behind many New York protests against Israel’s war on Gaza.

The group – and Kiswani herself – have been condemned by some for their rhetoric, including their stated support for armed resistance and the claim that Palestine must be liberated “by any means necessary”.

Pro-Israel groups, including Betar, have frequently called her a “terrorist” or “terror supporter”. She has also at times had heated disagreements with fellow pro-Palestine activists and has repeatedly criticized Zohran Mamdani, New York City’s mayor, for positions she views as compromising to the Palestinian cause.

But Kiswani has repeatedly denied allegations of antisemitism, arguing that the group’s focus is the state of Israel, not Jews.

“This is horrifying but not surprising in a political climate where our own president constantly sows division and pushes extremist rhetoric,” said Antonio Reynoso, the Brooklyn borough president, of the foiled plot.

“Political violence has no place in New York,” he added.

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