Trump
extends deadline for Iran to open strait of Hormuz by 10 days
President
claims talks with Tehran regime are ‘going very well’ and says he is pausing
‘Energy Plant destruction’
Jason
Burke in London and David Smith in Washington
Fri 27
Mar 2026 05.41 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/26/donald-trump-urges-iran-end-war-or-face-assassinations
Donald
Trump has extended his deadline for Iran to open the strait of Hormuz by 10
days to 6 April after saying talks are “going very well”.
The
president made the statement on Thursday in a social media post, saying: “As
per Iranian Government request, please let this statement serve to represent
that I am pausing the period of Energy Plant destruction by 10 Days to Monday,
April 6, 2026, at 8 P.M., Eastern Time,” Trump said on his Truth Social
platform.
“Talks
are ongoing and, despite erroneous statements to the contrary by the Fake News
Media, and others, they are going very well.”
Later
Trump told Fox News: “I gave them a 10-day period, they asked for seven.”
He also
continued to declare victory in the war, adding: “In a certain sense, we have
already won.”
Earlier,
the US president had urged Iranian leaders to negotiate an end to the
near-month-long war or face further assassinations of senior officials amid
intensified action by the US and Israel.
That
threat came as Israel said it had had “blown up and eliminated” the
Revolutionary Guards’ naval commander, Alireza Tangsiri, and several senior
officers in a strike on the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas.
Heavy
strikes by Israeli or US warplanes were also reported around Isfahan, home to a
major Iranian airbase and other military sites, as well as one of the nuclear
sites bombed by the US during the 12-day war in June.
Iran has
strenuously denied it is “begging to make a deal”, as Trump claimed, and
continued its retaliatory strikes across a swathe of the Middle East on
Thursday.
Loud
booms were reported in Tel Aviv, the central Israeli city of Modi’in and
Jerusalem throughout the day as Israel’s air defences worked to bring down
incoming missiles. In the Gulf, Iranian attacks were also intercepted.
Trump’s
new threat was among a series of statements made by the US president in
Washington and on social media on Thursday in which he again criticised Nato
allies, described Iran as producing “great negotiators” but “lousy fighters”,
and repeated his claim that the war he launched last month had already been
won.
“They now
have the chance, that is, to permanently abandon their nuclear ambitions and to
join a new path forward,” Trump said during a cabinet meeting at the White
House. “We’ll see if they want to do it. If they don’t, we’re their worst
nightmare.”
He
claimed Tehran had let 10 oil tankers sail through the strait of Hormuz as a
goodwill gesture in negotiations, including some Pakistan-flagged vessels.
Since the
war began with an Israeli airstrike that killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, dozens
of senior Iranian security and military officials have been killed by the US
and Israel, as well as political leaders such as Ali Larijani, the veteran head
of the national security council. The new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, is
thought to have been injured, possibly severely, in the attack that killed his
father.
Adm Brad
Cooper, head of US Central Command, said Thursday’s killing of Tangsiri put
Iran’s navy on a path toward “irreversible decline” and said the US would keep
striking naval targets. Israel’s defence minister, Israel Katz, said Tangsiri
had been “directly responsible for the terror operation of mining and blocking
the strait of Hormuz to maritime traffic”.
Though
the US claims to have destroyed most of Iran’s naval capabilities, Tehran has
smaller boats capable of laying mines and anti-ship cruise missiles that can be
launched from ashore. Either weapon could render the strait impassable to
shipping.
On
Friday, Yemen’s Houthis told Lloyd’s List there was “no cause for concern”
about the safety of shipping in the Red Sea, and that “at present there is no
reason to prevent this trade from continuing”. With Hormuz effectively all but
closed, crude exports from the Saudi Arabian port of Yanbu in the Red Sea via
an alternate route have surged, according to Lloyd’s List. The Houthis, an
Iran-aligned militant group in Yemen, could potentially try to strike those
vessels, further destabilising wobbling energy markets.
However,
it told the shipping news outlet that it “remains committed to safeguarding
navigation in the Red Sea and the Bab el Mandeb strait, as well as ensuring the
free flow of trade”.
There are
fears that if Trump follows through on threats to deploy troops to seize Kharg
Island or elsewhere, Tehran may ask the Houthis to strike shipping in the Red
Sea, through which about $1tn (£750bn) worth of goods passed each year before
the war. Earlier, Abdul-Malik al-Houthi, the Houthis’ leader, did not say
whether the armed rebel group would fight alongside Iran if asked to join the
conflict.
On
Sunday, Trump threated Iran with a massive escalation of the US-Israeli
offensive if it did not reopen the strait within 48 hours. Iran retaliated with
a threat to launch broad attacks on energy infrastructure in the Gulf and
Israel. Trump then extended his ultimatum until Friday or Saturday.
Iran’s
foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, accused the US of “double standards” and said
international law was “not a tool of convenience”.
He wrote
on X: “The US backed Israel’s Gaza blockade … yet condemns Iran for defending
itself in the Strait of Hormuz. Double standard: Israel’s crimes are OK while
Iran’s defense against aggressors is condemned.”
Israel
reportedly removed Araghchi and Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, a regime veteran who
is the speaker of Iran’s parliament, from its hitlist after Pakistan, which is
emerging as a key mediator in the conflict, asked Washington to ensure they
were not harmed, a Pakistani official said. Ghalibaf is reportedly the “top
man” with whom Trump said on Monday he has been indirectly negotiating on terms
for ending the conflict.
Trump
said on Thursday he was seeking an agreement that opened the strait of Hormuz
and shut down Tehran’s military and nuclear ambitions but suggested that a deal
might not ultimately come together. “I don’t know if we’ll be able to do that,”
he said of the prospects for a deal. “I don’t know if we’re willing to do
that.”
On
Thursday, Steve Witkoff, Trump’s envoy to the Middle East, said the US had
presented a 15-point “action list” to Iran via Pakistan as a framework for a
possible peace deal.
Speaking
at a cabinet meeting in Washington, Witkoff said there were “strong signs” that
Tehran was ready to negotiate an end to the fighting
A senior
Iranian official told Reuters on Thursday that Washington’s proposal for ending
nearly four weeks of fighting was “one-sided and unfair” but that diplomacy
continued.
Iran’s
Tasnim news agency, citing an unnamed official, said Iran’s demands included an
end to US and Israeli attacks on Iran but also on Tehran-backed groups
elsewhere in the region – an implicit reference to Lebanon’s Hezbollah, among
others. War reparations should be paid, it said, and Iran’s “sovereignty” over
the strait of Hormuz be respected.
Analysts
said it was very difficult to see any immediate pathway to an agreement given
the gap between the two sides and the continuing widening of the conflict,
which has directly involved more than a dozen countries from Azerbaijan to
Oman.
Thousands
of US marines and airborne troops have been sent to the region and could be
used to seize Kharg Island, Iran’s principal hub for oil exports, or other
strategic points in the Gulf. Such a move would mark a significant escalation
in the conflict.
Ali
Bahreini, Iran’s top envoy to UN institutions in Geneva, warned Thursday that
any US and Israeli attempt to mount a ground invasion of Iran would be a “big”
mistake.
The death
toll from the war has risen to more than 1,900 people in Iran, according to
authorities, and nearly 1,100 people in Lebanon, where more than a million have
been displaced. Israeli strikes in Lebanon have killed another 22 people and
wounded 110 in the past 24 hours, Lebanese officials said.
Israel
says its invasion of southern Lebanon is aimed at protecting its northern
border towns from attacks by Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militant Islamist
movement, and establishing a defensive buffer zone. Eighteen people have been
killed in Israel in the new conflict.
.jpeg)
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário