Trump told aides to prepare for lengthy Strait of Hormuz blockade, WSJ reports
Trump decided that putting pressure on Iran’s ability to export oil was less risky than resuming bombing or extracting the U.S. from the conflict entirely, the paper reported
President Donald Trump told his aides to prepare for an
extended U.S. Naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, the Wall Street Journal
reported, as the U.S. looks to intensify economic pressure on Iran as the war
enters its third month.
The president, in meetings with top aides, decided to
continue putting pressure on Iran’s ability to export oil by stopping any
vessel heading to or from the Islamic Republic’s ports, the newspaper reported
on Tuesday night. Trump determined that was a less risky option than resuming
bombing or extracting the U.S. from the conflict entirely, the outlet said.
The decision suggests that the U.S. could be moving into a
lengthy period with the fighting largely halted, but no durable resolution to
the conflict, and the status of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz still
uncertain.
The U.S. has been blocking ships going to and from Iranian
ports to try to squeeze the country of oil revenue, while Iran keeps the strait
closed
Trump earlier Tuesday said Iran had asked the U.S. to lift
the naval blockade of the strait while the two sides negotiate an end to the
two-month war, which has upended global energy supplies.
Tehran wants the critical waterway for oil and gas
shipments open “as soon as possible, as they try to figure out their leadership
situation,” Trump said on Truth Social earlier Tuesday. Iran has said it’s in a
“State of Collapse,” he added.
Iran has signalled it may be willing to accept an interim
deal to reopen the strait in exchange for Washington ending its blockade of
Iranian ports, while postponing more complex negotiations over the country’s
nuclear program. It is insisting on keeping some control over shipping through
the strait, which Washington is unlikely to accept.
Trump rejected that offer from Iran, according to the WSJ,
and told aides it showed that Iran wasn’t negotiating in good faith. Mediators
in Pakistan expect Iran will submit a revised proposal to end the war in the
next few days, CNN reported on Tuesday, citing sources close to the mediation
process.
Brent crude rose for a seventh straight session to settle
above US$111 a barrel, as concern grows of a protracted peace process that
could keep Hormuz shut for an indefinite period.
The war’s ripple effects were underscored when the United
Arab Emirates announced on Tuesday it was leaving OPEC, dealing a blow to the
oil cartel and its leader Saudi Arabia. The UAE, which can pump more crude than
is allowed under its OPEC quota, has long chafed at the group’s restrictions.
“The decision is taken at the right time in our view
because it’s not going to hugely impact the market: the market is
undersupplied,” UAE Energy Minister Suhail Al Mazrouei said. Abu Dhabi believes
the shortages caused by the war will require agility to respond to market
demands, he said.
The warring sides started a ceasefire around April 7 and
hostilities may resume if they fail to agree to fresh talks, following an
inconclusive first round in Pakistan in mid-April.
Iran’s offer to end the war is “better than what we thought
they were going to submit,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio told Fox News. Yet
the White House has “questions about whether the person submitting it had the
authority to submit,” he said, echoing previous U.S. claims that Iran’s leaders
are divided over their negotiating strategy.
The strategic Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of
the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas flowed before the conflict began,
remains at a virtual standstill.
Foreign leaders are increasingly frustrated with the
diplomatic impasse and the continued shutdown of the waterway, which has led to
fuel rationing across much of Asia and Africa and fears of a global economic
slowdown.
Here’s more on the war’s impact:
- The
U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control issued an alert warning financial
institutions about the sanctions risk of dealing with China’s so-called
teapot refineries over their role in importing Iranian oil.
- OFAC
separately issued “firm guidance” warning ships about the “significant
sanctions exposures related to making ‘toll’ payments to the Government of
Iran” or the country’s military for safe passage through the Strait of
Hormuz.
- U.S.
Central Command said Marines boarded the commercial vessel M/V Blue Star
III in the Arabian Sea on Tuesday, but released it “after conducting a
search and confirming the ship’s voyage would not include an Iranian port
call.” The ship was suspected of attempting to travel to Iran in violation
of the US naval blockade, Central Command said.
- The
UK’s new ambassador to the U.S., Christian Turner, was reported to have
said the real “special relationship” was between the U.S. and Israel, not
the U.K.. While the Foreign Office did not dispute the remarks, it said
they did not reflect the official position of their government. The
comments were first reported by the Financial Times hours before King
Charles III was due to arrive at the White House on Tuesday.
- The ceasefire in Lebanon remains shaky, with both Israel and Hezbollah accusing the other of attacks. The Israeli military said it dismantled two tunnels in southern Lebanon belonging to the Tehran-backed militant group.
- https://nationalpost.com/news/world/israel-middle-east/donald-trump-strait-of-hormuz-blockade
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