While this may not be a popular opinion,
the most important lines IMHO.
Similar to Qatar, they need help to keep the Taliban in check, to save face at home. The cooperation in counter-terrorism is noted, but just like the Qataris trying to convince the Talibs to have a more inclusive government, they want Pakistan to not recognize them until they at least give some power to the other parts of society in Afghanistan. This US administration needs a final peace it can live with and can be seen to be working with. In this regard, Pakistan would be savvy if it can convince the Talibs to open up minstries to women and more minorities. Even the west knows that it is a Taliban government, but it needs people it can be seen to be working with.
they also want to prevent China from getting un-impeded competition free access to rare earths in Afghanistan, and for Pakistan to advocate for US companies to have access to mine or build transit infrastructure like the TAPI pipeline in Afghanistan. So to get the US to see the potential business opportunities, Pakistani companies should ask the Talibs if they can start open pit mining in a big way, and employing thousands of Afghans. If Afghanistan starts exporting more, and China start operations, US companies can be told that they too can mine if they can get permission from the US government ...
Before this gets blown out of proportion, we should see the two areas that Blinken is hinting at, and IMHO, work to cooperate on those, so we can transition to a more simple mutually beneficial relationship, and prevent the Pak-US relationship from getting derailed by other actors. If it’s on a productive course, in the next months and years to come, it will be harder for a future US administration to derail it. (Pakistan needs to work with this unique US administration in a way that a new hardline Republican government in 2024 is left with a stable fair accompli, and would be doing more harm to overturn the apple cart then to let it keep going along)
should the US carry out punitive measures, such as remove Pakistan from MNNA status or sanctioning high ranking people, it will only harm its own interests in the region, undermining efforts to limit Chinese or Russian influence in the region.