He said at this point of time there was no Syria-specific agreement and reaffirmed Pakistan's neutral stance on the vexed Syrian conflict.
Like any country with a flourishing arms industry, Pakistan was trying to sell its arms and there was nothing dubious about Riyadh's interest in purchasing Pakistani weapons, Aziz said an interview to BBC last evening.
On its ties with Iran and Saudi Arabia, he said Pakistan wanted to restore the balance of relations with the two countries which he said had been disturbed during the past five years.
He hoped that Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif would visit Iran in May or June this year in line with promoting peace in the region.
Speculation had been rife in Pakistan after a joint Pakistan-Saudi declaration in February called for the "formation of a transitional governing body" with full executive powers as part of a solution to the three-year civil war in Syria.
The move was criticised by the opposition in the National Assembly.
It is being speculated here that the arms that Saudi Arabia would buy from Pakistan would eventually get into the hands of the Syrian rebels.
Adding to the speculation was a USD 1.5 billion "gift" given by a "friendly country" to Pakistan.
Though the government here has remained tight-lipped on the identity of the nation, it is an open secret here that the country in question was Saudi Arabia.
