Trump Claims U.S. Navy Will Block Hormuz Strait After Iran Talks Fiasco

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US Blocks Iranian Vessels in Strait of Hormuz

US President Donald Trump has ordered a naval blockade targeting vessels linked to Iran in the strategic Strait of Hormuz. This move comes after high-stakes talks between Washington and Tehran collapsed in Islamabad, leaving the future of a fragile ceasefire uncertain.

Trump announced that the US Navy would “immediately” begin a blockade of ships entering or leaving the Strait of Hormuz. The decision aims to eliminate Iran’s key source of leverage in the war by exerting strategic control over the waterway, which is responsible for the shipping of 20% of global oil supplies before fighting began.

Will the US Navy Interdict Ships in International Waters?

A US blockade could further rattle global energy markets. It was not immediately clear how it might be carried out, but Trump told Fox News the goal was to ensure all ships could transit:

“It’s going to be all or none, and that’s the way it is,” Trump said.

Trump said he has “instructed our navy to seek and interdict every vessel in International Waters that has paid a toll to Iran. No one who pays an illegal toll will have safe passage on the high seas.” Other nations would be involved in the blockade, he said, but did not name them.

Freedom of peaceful navigation is a basic principle of international maritime trade, but Iran has asserted control of the strait.

Is the Strait of Hormuz Under Iran’s Full Control?

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard later said the strait remained under Iran’s “full control” and was open for non-military vessels, but military ones would get a “forceful response,” two semi-official Iranian news agencies reported.

During the talks, the US military said two destroyers had transited the strait ahead of mine-clearing work, a first since the war began. Iran denied that.

How Did US-Iran Negotiations End?

The face-to-face talks that ended early Sunday were the highest-level negotiations between the longtime rivals since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Both delegations later left Islamabad.

Neither indicated what will happen after the ceasefire expires on April 22. Both said their positions were clear and blamed the other.

“We need to see an affirmative commitment that they will not seek a nuclear weapon, and they will not seek the tools that would enable them to quickly achieve a nuclear weapon,” Vice President JD Vance, leading the US side, said afterward.

Parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, who led Iran’s side, said it was time for the United States “to decide whether it can gain our trust or not.” Iranian officials earlier said talks fell apart over two or three key issues, blaming what they called US overreach.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said his country will try to facilitate a new dialogue in the coming days. Iran said it was open to continuing the dialogue, Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency reported.

Iran’s Nuclear Programme: A Key Sticking Point

Iran’s nuclear programme was at the center of tensions long before the US and Israel launched the war on February 28. The fighting has killed at least 3,000 people in Iran, 2,055 in Lebanon, 23 in Israel and more than a dozen in Gulf Arab states, and caused lasting damage to infrastructure in half a dozen countries.

Tehran has long denied seeking nuclear weapons but insisted on its right to a civilian nuclear programme. The landmark 2015 nuclear deal, which Trump later pulled the US out of, took well over a year of negotiations.

Experts say Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium, though not weapons-grade, is only a short technical step away.

An Iranian diplomatic official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of closed-door talks, denied that negotiations had failed over Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

“Iran is not seeking to acquire nuclear weapons, but it has the right to nuclear energy for peaceful purposes,” the official said.

Inside Iran: New Exhaustion and Anger

Inside Iran, there was new exhaustion and anger after months of unrest that began with nationwide protests against economic issues and then political ones, which turned into weeks of sheltering from US and Israeli bombardment.

“We have never sought war. But if they try to win what they failed to win on the battlefield through talks, that’s absolutely unacceptable,” Mohammad Bagher Karami said in Tehran.

More Questions as Israel Presses Ahead in Lebanon

Iran’s 10-point proposal for the talks explicitly called for a halt to Israeli strikes on the Iranian-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon. Israel has said the ceasefire did not apply in Lebanon, but Iran and Pakistan said it did.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited parts of southern Lebanon under Israeli control on Sunday, for the first time since the current round of fighting.

Negotiations between Israel and Lebanon are expected to begin Tuesday in Washington after Israel’s surprise announcement authorising talks despite their lack of official relations.

Israel wants Lebanon’s government to assume responsibility for disarming Hezbollah, but the militant group has survived efforts to curb its strength for decades.

The day the Iran ceasefire deal was announced, Israel pounded Beirut with airstrikes, killing more than 300 people in the deadliest day in Lebanon since the war began, according to the country’s Health Ministry.

Though Israel’s strikes have calmed in Beirut, attacks on southern Lebanon have intensified alongside the ground invasion it renewed after Hezbollah launched rockets toward Israel in the war’s opening days.

Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported six people were killed Sunday in Maaroub village near the coastal city of Tyre.

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