- “Will never forget Pakistan’s support during the Israel war,” Iran says.
- Tehran highlights Opportunities to increase bilateral cooperation.
- Mohsin Naqvi congratulates President Pezeshkian with “Great Victory”.
During a meeting with Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said Iran has paid great attention to its relations with Islamabad and thanked the Minister of support during the recent 12-day war against Israel.
Warning that Israel was trying to create a gap among Muslim countries, President Pezeshkian called on “inevitable” unity and harmony among Islamic countries.
Emphasizes the importance of diplomatic exchanges and constructive dialogue to increase cooperation between the two countries he expressed satisfaction over the current bilateral relations between the nearby nations ..
The Iranian president further emphasized that Pakistan and Iran had enormous opportunities to improve cooperation and said his country would never forget the support expanded by Pakistan during their war with Israel.
Meanwhile, Naqvi congratulated President Pezeshkian of achieving a “great victory” and remembering Pakistan’s support for Iran, saying that Islamabad strongly condemned the attack on Tehran on each forum.
He noted that Pakistan’s parliament was the first to adopt a decision condemning the war imposed on Iran and supported Iran’s legitimate right to self -defense.
The two leaders’ remarks come weeks after a 12-day armed conflict between Israel and Iran broke out on June 13 following Israeli air strikes on Iranian military, nuclear and civilian targets, resulting in at least 606 deaths and 5,332 injuries, according to Iran’s Ministry of Health.
In response, Tehran performed missile and drone attacks on Israel, killed at least 29 people and wounded over 3,400, based on data from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
The conflict also saw the American bombing of Iran’s several nuclear facilities and claimed the strikes destroyed Iran’s nuclear program.
The matches eventually ended with an American ceasefire that began on June 24.
Meanwhile, Tehran about the nuclear question has said that its collaboration with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) “will have a new form” and has expressed a desire for a diplomatic solution to resolve concerns about its nuclear program.
Iran’s collaboration with IAEA “has not stopped but will take on a new form” after the Islamic Republic formally joined the UN Watchdog in early July.
Iran has partially blamed the IAEA for the June attacks on its nuclear facilities, as Israel says it was launched to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon – an ambition Tehran has repeatedly denied.



