This collection of prediction markets examines a pivotal geopolitical scenario: whether the United States and Iran will hold formal diplomatic meetings by June 30, 2026, and if so, where those talks might occur. These five markets are grouped because they all address different facets of the same underlying event. The first market poses the foundational question—will a qualifying diplomatic meeting happen by the deadline? The other four explore geography, asking whether any meeting would take place in Pakistan, Russia, Egypt, or Oman. These markets are logically interconnected. If the probability of a meeting occurring is low, location-specific probabilities should reflect that constraint. If market participants expect talks to happen, the combined location probabilities should be consistent with that view. By comparing prices across these five related markets, readers gain insight into two layers of expectation: first, the likelihood that talks will occur at all, and second, where the international community might gather for such discussions. The relative pricing of each location reveals what market participants perceive about viable diplomatic venues. Certain countries may emerge as more probable sites due to existing diplomatic relationships, geographic neutrality, or regional influence. These prediction markets synthesize perspectives from analysts, diplomacy observers, and policy experts tracking US-Iran relations. As circumstances change—new diplomatic overtures, third-party mediation efforts, or shifts in international dynamics—market prices typically respond, often shifting before major news breaks. This curated grouping allows you to watch all five markets together as an integrated event forecast, observing how probabilities shift as new information emerges and what the collective market assessment implies about the likelihood and geography of future diplomatic engagement between the US and Iran.