消息人士:美国高级官员或于数日内重返巴基斯坦参与伊朗问题谈判


2026-04-17T13:17:00-0400 / 哥伦比亚广播公司(CBS)新闻

作者:玛格丽特·布伦南,玛格丽特·布伦南《与玛格丽特·布伦南直面国情咨文》节目主持人;首席外交事务通讯员
玛格丽特·布伦南是哥伦比亚广播公司《与玛格丽特·布伦南直面国情咨文》节目的主持人。常驻华盛顿特区的布伦南同时也是该电视网的首席外交事务通讯员,以及《60分钟》节目特约通讯员。此外,她定期亮相《CBS晚间新闻》,在突发政治和外交新闻时坐镇华盛顿报道。

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玛格丽特·布伦南、奥利维亚·加齐斯,奥利维亚·加齐斯
奥利维亚·加齐斯负责哥伦比亚广播公司新闻的情报与国际安全领域报道。曾两次获艾美奖提名,她曾随美国国务卿出访全球各地,并为哥伦比亚广播公司新闻的电视、广播、网络和流媒体平台提供关于情报、外交政策及其他安全议题的报道。

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奥利维亚·加齐斯、萨拉·库克,萨拉·库克
萨拉·库克是哥伦比亚广播公司新闻白宫制作人兼多平台记者。她曾报道过三届美国总统竞选,以及奥巴马、拜登和特朗普政府的相关事务。

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萨拉·库克、加布里埃尔·阿克、詹姆斯·拉波尔塔
詹姆斯·拉波尔塔 国家安全协调制片人
詹姆斯·拉波尔塔是哥伦比亚广播公司新闻华盛顿分社的国家安全协调制片人。他曾是美国海军陆战队步兵老兵,参加过阿富汗战争。

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詹姆斯·拉波尔塔

更新时间:2026年4月17日 / 美国东部时间下午2:25 / CBS新闻

华盛顿讯——据数位知情人士透露,在美国正对伊朗港口及海岸线所在的霍尔木兹海峡这一狭窄海上咽喉点收紧海军封锁之际,特朗普政府正考虑重启外交努力,最快于数日内派遣高级官员重返巴基斯坦。

尽管该计划仍处于初步阶段,但其目标是重启与伊朗代表的谈判,以期与德黑兰达成更长期的和平协议。截至周五上午,尚未敲定最终日期,但最早可能于周一恢复会谈,这凸显了谈判的多变性和不确定性。

潜在外交行动的核心人物是副总统J·D·万斯,他正被考虑重返伊斯兰堡——此前秘密谈判曾在当地悄然进行。他大概率将与特朗普总统的中东问题特使史蒂夫·威特科夫夫一同前往,后者在本届政府推动地区斡旋协议的过程中扮演着越来越显眼的角色。

特朗普总统周五接听了多名记者的多通电话,并就该问题发表了多项声明。他对彭博社记者凯特·沙利文表示,尚未确定谁将带领下一轮面对面会谈。总统称,代表团可能包括万斯、威特科夫夫和他的女婿贾里德·库什纳。

特朗普对《新闻国度》记者凯莉·迈耶表示,伊朗已同意停止浓缩铀活动。据Axios记者巴拉克·拉维德透露,特朗普预计将在“一两天内”达成伊朗问题协议。

此次拟议访问是基于上周在伊斯兰堡进行的一轮密集会谈。当时万斯带领团队与伊朗中间人进行了数小时谈判,但会谈未取得突破,核心分歧仍未解决——包括伊朗核活动的范围,以及结束今年2月爆发的战争的条件。

尽管如此,双方官员在公开场合都采取了明显克制的态度,表明尽管外交进程紧张,但尚未穷尽外交渠道。美国官员表示,即使军事行动持续,也愿意继续接触。伊朗代表则表示对进一步对话持谨慎开放态度,但坚持认为,要取得有意义的进展,需要华盛顿做出迄今一直不愿提供的让步。

与此同时,西方高级领导人于周五在巴黎召开紧急会谈,旨在保障霍尔木兹海峡的航行自由。该海峡是全球能源供应的关键通道。

法国总统埃马纽埃尔·马克龙将亲自主持此次会议,英国首相基尔·斯塔默、德国总理弗里德里希·梅尔茨和意大利总理焦尔吉娅·梅洛尼将一同参会,凸显出随着地区紧张局势持续升级,欧洲主要大国对此的高度关切。

预计将有来自欧洲、亚洲和拉丁美洲的30多名代表以线上方式参会,反映出这条航道所涉及的广泛国际利益——全球约20%的石油运输都途经该海峡。

据一名法国官员透露,此次讨论可能涉及一系列潜在措施,包括为商业船只提供协调海军护航、扩大扫雷行动,以及强化情报共享机制。该官员表示,主办方仍在与美国和伊朗保持持续沟通。美国、伊朗和以色列均未直接参与周五的会谈。

但在各国政府寻求外交解决方案的同时,霍尔木兹海峡附近的商船正面临另一场岌岌可危的困境:海峡内的水雷。

美国官员今年3月对CBS新闻透露,这条关键航道内至少存在12枚伊朗布设的水下水雷。伊朗历来拥有数千枚海军水雷的储备,这些水雷主要由德黑兰、中国或俄罗斯制造。

周五,伊朗外交部长阿巴斯·阿拉克奇在X平台上发帖称:“遵照黎巴嫩停火协议,在停火剩余期限内,所有商业船只通过霍尔木兹海峡的航道已完全开放,将按照伊朗伊斯兰共和国港口与海事组织此前宣布的协调航线通行。”

但据CBS新闻查阅的美国海军公告显示,美国海军向船长发布警告称,霍尔木兹海峡部分区域的水雷威胁“尚未完全明确,应考虑避开该区域”。

特朗普在Truth Social平台上表示,在美国的帮助下,伊朗将清除海峡内的所有水雷。

詹妮弗·雅各布斯对本报道亦有贡献。

Senior U.S. officials could be back in Pakistan for Iran talks within days, sources say

2026-04-17T13:17:00-0400 / CBS News

By Margaret Brennan, Margaret Brennan Moderator, “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan;” Chief foreign affairs correspondent

Margaret Brennan is moderator of “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” on CBS. Based in Washington, D.C., Brennan is also the Network’s chief foreign affairs correspondent and a contributing correspondent to 60 Minutes. Additionally, she appears regularly on the “CBS Evening News,” leading coverage from Washington when news breaks on the political and foreign affairs fronts.

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Margaret Brennan, Olivia Gazis, Olivia Gazis

Olivia Gazis covers intelligence and international security matters for CBS News. Twice Emmy-nominated, she has traveled worldwide with the secretary of state and contributes reporting on intelligence, foreign policy and other security topics across CBS News broadcast, radio, online and streaming platforms.

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Olivia Gazis, Sara Cook, Sara Cook

Sara Cook is a White House producer and multi-platform reporter for CBS News. She has covered three presidential campaigns and the Obama, Biden, and Trump administrations.

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Sara Cook, Gabrielle Ake, James LaPorta
James LaPorta National security coordinating producer

James LaPorta is the national security coordinating producer for the CBS News’ Washington bureau. He is a former U.S. Marine veteran infantryman and veteran of the Afghanistan war.

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James LaPorta

Updated on: April 17, 2026 / 2:25 PM EDT / CBS News

Washington— Amid a tightening American naval blockade of Iran’s ports and coastline in the narrow maritime chokepoint of the Strait of Hormuz, the Trump administration is weighing a renewed diplomatic push that could send senior officials back to Pakistan within days, according to several people familiar with the deliberations.

While still tentative, the effort is aimed at reviving negotiations with Iranian representatives in hopes of reaching a longer-term peace deal with Tehran. No firm date had been finalized as of Friday morning, but talks could resume as soon as Monday, underscoring the fluid and uncertain nature of the talks.

At the center of the potential outreach is Vice President JD Vance, who is being considered for a return trip to Islamabad, where back-channel negotiations have quietly taken place. He would likely be joined by Steve Witkoff, President Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East, who has played an increasingly visible role in the administration’s effort to broker agreements in the region.

Mr. Trump took rounds of phone calls from different reporters on Friday and made several claims on the issue. He told Bloomberg’s Kate Sullivan that he had not made a determination as to who would lead the next round of in-person talks. The president said it would be a group that could include Vance, Witkoff and Jared Kushner, his son-in-law.

The president told NewsNation’s Kellie Meyer that Iran had agreed to stop enriching uranium. Axios’ Barak Ravid said Mr. Trump expected an Iran deal “in a day or two.”

The prospective visit follows an exhaustive round of talks last week in Islamabad, where Vance led hours of negotiations with Iranian intermediaries. Those discussions ended without a breakthrough, leaving core disputes unresolved — including the scope of Iran’s nuclear activities and the conditions for ending the war that began in February.

Still, officials on both sides have struck a notably measured tone in public, suggesting that diplomacy, while strained, is not yet exhausted. American officials have indicated a willingness to continue engagement even as military operations proceed. Iranian representatives, for their part, have signaled cautious openness to further dialogue, though they have insisted any meaningful progress would require concessions Washington has so far been reluctant to offer.

Meanwhile, senior Western leaders are convening in Paris on Friday for urgent talks aimed at safeguarding freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical artery for global energy supplies.

French President Emmanuel Macron will host the meeting in person alongside U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, underscoring the level of concern among major European powers as tensions in the region persist.

More than 30 additional representatives from Europe, Asia and Latin America are expected to join virtually, reflecting the broad international stakes tied to the waterway, which handles about 20% of the world’s oil shipments.

Discussions may address a range of potential measures, according to a French official, including coordinated naval escorts for commercial vessels, expanded demining operations and enhanced intelligence-sharing mechanisms. The official said organizers remain in continuous contact with both the United States and Iran. Neither country, nor Israel, is participating directly in Friday’s talks.

But as administrations navigate diplomatic solutions, commercial ships near the Strait of Hormuz have their own precarious quagmire: mines in the Strait of Hormuz.

U.S. officials told CBS News in March there were at least a dozen underwater Iranian mines in the vital passageway. Iran has historically enjoyed a stockpile of thousands of naval mines largely produced by Tehran, China or Russia.

On Friday, Iran’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Abbas Araghchi posted to X, “In line with the ceasefire in Lebanon, the passage for all commercial vessels through Strait of Hormuz is declared completely open for the remaining period of ceasefire, on the coordinated route as already announced by Ports and Maritime Organisation of the Islamic Rep. of Iran.”

However, the U.S. Navy posted an advisory to ship captains that the mine threat in parts of the Strait of Hormuz “[are] not fully understood and avoidance of [the] area should be considered,” according to the U.S. Navy advisory reviewed by CBS News.

Mr. Trump said on Truth Social that Iran, with the help of the United States, will remove all mines from the strait.

Jennifer Jacobs contributed to this report.

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