Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif
Pakistan PM says agreement to be signed within 24 hours
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- Pakistan says US and Iran have agreed on final peace deal text
- Islamabad preparing for US-Iran digital signing ceremony
- Draft framework includes ceasefire, Hormuz reopening, and nuclear commitments
In what is being hailed as an extraordinary triumph for global diplomacy, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif announced that the United States and Iran have reached an absolute agreement on the final text of a historic peace framework, effectively drawing the curtain on months of destructive, high-stakes military conflict in the Middle East.
Sharif revealed that the months-long mediation channel anchored by Islamabad has yielded a definitive breakthrough.
He confirmed that both Washington and Tehran have given their formal assent to the negotiated document, and that Pakistan is currently finalizing the digital infrastructure required to host a secure, remote electronic signing ceremony within the next 24 hours.
"I am entirely confident that this historic accord between Washington and Tehran will establish a foundational, lasting peace," Prime Minister Sharif declared, adding that the rapid implementation of a remote digital signing protocol is designed to bypass logistical gridlocks and enact an immediate cessation of hostilities on the ground.
Technical talks loom
While the political breakthrough has been secured at the highest levels of leadership, Sharif emphasized that the work is far from finished.
The Prime Minister announced that a comprehensive round of technical talks will convene next week, immediately following the electronic signing.
These high-level working groups -comprising military commanders, nuclear inspectors, and maritime logistics experts- will meet to finalize the rigid operational timelines for troop repositioning, the dismantling of contested infrastructure, and the formal deployment of international observers.



