Iran War
Live Updates: Vance’s Trip to Peace Talks on Hold
The vice
president’s trip to Pakistan was suspended because Tehran did not respond to
American negotiating positions, a U.S. official with direct knowledge of the
situation said. Still, the trip could be back on at a moment’s notice.
April 21,
2026, 1:51 p.m. ET20 minutes ago
Jonathan
Swan Elian
Peltier Tyler
Pager and Farnaz Fassihi
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/04/21/world/iran-us-war-trump-news
Here’s
the latest.
Vice
President JD Vance’s trip to Pakistan for a second round of negotiations with
Iran has been put on hold after Tehran failed to respond to American positions,
a U.S. official with direct knowledge of the situation said Tuesday. Iran, for
its part, said it had not yet decided whether to resume talks with the United
States.
With the
two-week truce set to expire Wednesday in Iran, it was unclear what steps, if
any, Iran or the United States would take next. Talks could resume at a
moment’s notice though President Trump has suggested that he did not want to
extend the truce without a longer-term agreement.
Iran’s
Foreign Ministry spokesman, Esmail Baghaei, said Iran had not decided whether
to even go to Pakistan. He blamed it on “contradictory messages, inconsistent
behavior and unacceptable actions by the American side,” according to the
nation’s state broadcaster, IRIB.
But in
private, two senior Iranian officials had said Monday that an Iranian
delegation was making plans to travel to Pakistan on Tuesday and to resume
talks. The Iranian officials said that Mr. Ghalibaf would attend negotiations
with the United States if Mr. Vance were there.
Speaking
to CNBC on Tuesday, Mr. Trump expressed optimism about potential talks but said
that the U.S. military stood ready to bomb again if no deal was struck with the
Iranian government. “We don’t have that much time,” he said.
Even if
the sides return to the negotiating table, many sticking points remain — on
Iran’s nuclear program, for instance, and on the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic
conduit for oil and gas. The threat of Iranian attacks has throttled shipping
traffic through the strait, prompting an American blockade of Iranian ports
that the U.S. Navy says has forced 28 ships to turn around.
Here’s
what else we are covering:
Energy:
Oil prices approached $100 a barrel and stocks faded on Tuesday as uncertainty
clouded the possibility of peace talks.
Lebanon:
Even though a separate 10-day cease-fire between Israel and Lebanon has mostly
held since it went into effect last week, Israel on Tuesday blamed Hezbollah,
the Iran-backed militant group, for firing rockets toward Israeli troops in
southern Lebanon. The Israeli military has kept up repeated strikes since the
truce. Hezbollah did not immediately comment.
Tanker:
The U.S. military stopped and boarded a sanctioned ship in the Indo-Pacific
region that was carrying oil from Iran overnight, the Pentagon said on Tuesday.
China: Xi
Jinping, China’s top leader, called for the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz —
the first time he has done so — underscoring the war’s impact on Chinese
economic interests.
Shirin
Hakim contributed reporting.


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