India, Iran and Afghanistan had signed a trilateral agreement in 2016 to jointly develop the Chabahar port, opening a new strategic transit route between the three nations and other Central Asian nations, bypassing Pakistan.
In November last year, India delivered the first consignment of wheat to Afghanistan through the Chabahar Port.
Iran's Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, who is on a three-day visit to Islamabad, said the Chabahar port project was not meant to "encircle Pakistan ... strangulate anybody".
"We are taking measures to do that and there is an open invitation to Pakistan to participate in that," he said.
Zarif likened Iran's relations with India to Pakistan's ties with Saudi Arabia.
"Our relations with India, just like Pakistan's relations with Saudi Arabia, are not against Islamabad as we understand Pakistan's relations with Saudi Arabia are not against Iran," the Iranian foreign minister said.
"We offered to participate in the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. We have also offered Pakistan and China to participate in Chahbahar," said Zarif.
He also said that Gwadar Port and Chabahar Port needed to be linked through sea and land routes for development of deprived Eastern and South-eastern Iran and South Western Pakistan.
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