Iran War
Live Updates: Reported Seizure of Ships Injects New Uncertainty Over Peace
Talks
Iran’s
Revolutionary Guards said they had seized two ships near the Strait of Hormuz.
A Trump spokeswoman said the president did not view those actions as violating
the cease-fire.
Lynsey
ChutelLeo SandsChris Cameron and Max Bearak
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/04/22/world/iran-war-trump-ceasefire-talks
Here’s
the latest.
The
Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps of Iran said it had seized two cargo ships
on Wednesday near the contested Strait of Hormuz, Iranian news media reported,
adding uncertainty to a cease-fire President Trump extended on Tuesday hours
before it would have expired.
The
reported seizures, which came after the U.S. Navy denied dozens of ships access
to Iranian ports, made clear that despite the efforts to turn the pause in
direct hostilities into a lasting peace, neither Iran nor the United States is
shying away from trying to exert control over the waterway.
Karoline
Leavitt, the White House press secretary, played down the reported ship
seizures, telling Fox News that Mr. Trump did not view them as a violation of
the cease-fire as efforts to revive peace talks continued. “These were not U.S.
ships,” she said. “These were not Israeli ships.”
Iranian
news media reported that the Guards had targeted the two cargo vessels, the MSC
Francesca and the Epaminondas, a Greek-owned ship, because they did not abide
by Iran’s recently imposed rules for passing through the strait. Those rules
include securing permits for preapproved routes.
MSC, a
global shipping company based in Geneva, did not immediately respond to a
request for comment. Greece’s foreign minister said that the Greek-owned ship
had sustained “extremely wide damage.” Tracking data suggested that both ships
were now anchored around eight miles off the Iranian coast.
Several
Iranian news media outlets reported earlier that the Guards had fired on a
third cargo ship, the Euphoria. Tracking data showed that vessel stopping
multiple times and changing directions abruptly as it passed through the
strait.
With no
clear indication that either Washington or Tehran was willing to back down from
its public stances on the strait and other issues, there appeared to be an
impasse over the conditions that need to be met before a new round of peace
talks.
Here’s
what else we are covering:
War
powers vote: For a fifth time since the war began on Feb. 28, Senate
Republicans voted on Wednesday to block a resolution to enforce Congress’ war
powers, with Democrats failing once again in their effort to constrain Mr.
Trump. A decades-old law allows the president to wage war without congressional
approval for 60 days; that window would expire on May 1.
Iran
border crossing: After entering Turkey, Iranians belonging to different
political persuasions and from parts of the country told The Times that they
were fleeing a deepening economic crisis at home.
Navy
secretary out: John Phelan was fired after months of Pentagon infighting over
how to revive the Navy’s struggling shipbuilding program.
Lebanon:
An exchange of attacks along the Israeli-Lebanese border on Wednesday put
pressure on the countries’ already tenuous truce.


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