Iran has now brought Strait of Hormuz traffic close to a standstill after firing on three ships and taking control of two of them on Wednesday, pushing a tense ceasefire fight into a shipping crisis with global costs.
The attacks came one day after Trump extended the ceasefire while keeping the U.S. naval blockade on Iranian ports in place.
Iranian media said the Revolutionary Guard was moving the two captured vessels into Iran, while the White House said the detentions did not break the ceasefire because the ships were international vessels, not American or Israeli ones.
That clash is now squeezing one of the worldβs most important energy routes. Nearly 20% of traded oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz in normal times, but the current standoff between the U.S. and Iran has choked off almost all exports moving through it.
Brent crude climbed above $100 a barrel multiple times, up about 35% from prewar levels. Gas prices have jumped far beyond the Gulf, and the cost of food and other basic goods is rising too. Even so, stock markets have mostly kept their cool.
Iran blames the blockade and Israeli attacks for keeping the strait shut
Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Iranβs chief negotiator in talks with the U.S., said it is βnot possibleβ for the Strait of Hormuz to reopen because of what he called βthe blatant violations of the ceasefireβ by the U.S. and Israel.
In a post on X on Wednesday, Ghalibaf said those violations include the American naval blockade on Iranian ports, which he said had taken the global economy βhostage,β as well as Israeli βwarmongeringβ βon all fronts.β
Masoud Pezeshkian, Iranβs president, said Iran still wants talks, but he said βbreach of commitments, blockade and threats are main obstacles to genuine negotiations.β In another post on X, Pezeshkian said Iran has βwelcomed dialogue and agreementβ with the U.S., then accused Trumpβs administration of undercutting that path.
He wrote, βThe world sees your endless hypocritical rhetoric and contradiction between claims and actions.β Early Tuesday, it looked like new peace talks between the U.S. and Iran would be held in Pakistan this week, but they still have not started.
The shipping fight is already hitting consumers and businesses. Dan JΓΈrgensen, the European Unionβs energy commissioner, warned that the damage could last and compared the disruption to other major energy shocks from the past fifty years. He said Europe is losing around 500 million euros, or about $600 million, every day because of the crisis.
Trump defends the port blockade and demands Iran hand over enriched uranium
In an interview with Fox News, Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said the U.S. blockade of Iranian ports has been βmassively effectiveβ and is βinflicting maximum leverage and economic pressureβ on Iran.
Asked whether Trump sees Iranβs seizure of the two ships as a ceasefire violation, Karoline said, βNo, because these were not U.S. ships. These were not Israeli ships. These were two international vessels.β
Karoline also said Trump wants Iran to give up its enriched uranium. She said, βThey must turn over the enriched uranium thatβs in their possession.
While it is very far into the ground, thanks to the success of Operation Midnight Hammer, itβs important to the president that they hand that enriched uranium over. Heβs made that quite clear to them.β Operation Midnight Hammer was the U.S. military strike on Iranβs nuclear facilities last June. Karoline said the administration is βwaiting to hear back from the Iranian regimeβ on where negotiations stand.
Trump told Fox News there is βno time pressureβ on the ceasefire or on talks with Iran, and βno time frameβ for when the war could end. He said, βPeople say I want to get it over because of the midterms, not true.β
He also said the blockade has hit Iranβs leaders harder than airstrikes. βThe blockade scares them even more than the bombing,β Trump said. βTheyβve been bombed for years but the blockade they hate.β
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