Trump says US negotiators will be in Pakistan today for talks with Iran
Trump, in a post on social media Sunday, did not detail which officials the US would send to a second round of in-person talks with Iran in Islamabad. The White House and office of US Vice President JD Vance, who led the first round of talks, did not immediately respond to messages Sunday morning.
In his post, Trump accused Iran of violating the ceasefire agreement by firing bullets on Saturday in the Strait of Hormuz and threatened to destroy civilian infrastructure in Iran if it does not take the deal that the US is offering. “If they do not, the United States is going to knock out every single power plant, and every single bridge, in Iran,” Trump wrote.
There was no immediate comment from Iran.
Iran doubled down on its pledge to restrict ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz as long as the US blockade of Iranian ports remains in place, as mediators scrambled to extend the ceasefire set to expire on Wednesday.
The duelling blockades have complicated Pakistani-led mediation attempts and raised questions about whether the two-week truce can be extended. “It is impossible for others to pass through the Strait of Hormuz while we cannot,” Iranian parliamentary Speaker Mohammed Bagher Ghalibaf said in an interview aired on state television late Saturday.
Ghalibaf, who is Iran's chief negotiator in talks with the United States, slammed the US blockade as a “naive decision made out of ignorance." He said before Trump's latest comments that Iran still was seeking peace despite deep-seated distrust of the United States. “There will be no retreat in the field of diplomacy," he said, acknowledging that the gap between the two sides remained wide.
Iran had announced the strait's reopening after a 10-day truce between Israel and the Iranian-backed Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon took hold on Friday. But after Trump said that the US blockade of Iran's ports “will remain in full force” until Tehran reaches a deal with the United States, Iran said it would continue enforcing its restrictions in the strait.
After a brief uptick in transit attempts on Saturday, vessels in the Persian Gulf held their positions, wary after two India-flagged ships were fired on mid-transit and forced to turn around. Their retreat returned the strait, through which roughly one-fifth of the world's oil trade normally passes, to its pre-ceasefire status quo, threatening to deepen the global energy crisis and push the parties towards renewed conflict as the war entered its eighth week.
With days until the ceasefire in place between the US and Iran runs out, Iran on Saturday said it had received new proposals from the United States, and Pakistani mediators were working to arrange another round of direct negotiations in the coming days.
Pakistani authorities began tightening security in the capital, Islamabad. A regional official involved in the mediation efforts said mediators were finalising the preparations and that US advance security teams were already on the ground. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to discuss the preparations with the media.
For Iran, the strait's closure — imposed after the US and Israel launched the war on February 28 during talks over Tehran's nuclear programme — is perhaps its most powerful weapon, threatening the world economy and inflicting political pain on Trump.
For the United States, the blockade squeezes Iran's already weakened economy and pressures its government by denying it long-term cash flow. Though the ceasefire has held, the standoff in the strait threatens to plunge the region back into a war that has killed at least 3,000 people in Iran, more than 2,290 in Lebanon, 23 in Israel and more than a dozen in Gulf Arab states. Fifteen Israeli soldiers in Lebanon and 13 US service members throughout the region have been killed.
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