Arab countries push for end to Iran war amid reports U.S. is preparing for new attacks
Since the ceasefire started six weeks ago, U.S. President Donald Trump has veered between assurances a peace accord was almost at hand and threats of new aerial assaults
Pakistan's Army Chief Syed Asim Munir,
left, is greeted by Iran's Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni upon his arrival
in Tehran as part of ongoing mediation efforts between Iran and the United
States, on May 22, 2026. Photo by Handout/Pakistan Inter-Services Public
Relations/AFP via Getty Images
Several Arab nations joined Pakistan in
trying to push for a resolution to the Iran war as they urged President Donald
Trump to allow more time for negotiations.
While there were some indications of
progress in talks to end the conflict, Axios and CBS News reported that Trump
was preparing for a possible fresh round of strikes, although he hadn’t made a
final decision.
Iran warned that any new attacks by the
U.S. or Israel would extend the war to “new regional fronts,” the semi-official
Tasnim news agency reported, citing a military source.
One of the countries in the region, the
United Arab Emirates, joined Qatar and Saudi Arabia in appeals to Trump,
according to several people familiar with the matter.
And earlier Friday, the favored
interlocutor between the U.S. and Iran, Pakistan’s army chief Field Marshal
Asim Munir, arrived in Tehran.
Munir was welcomed by Iranian Interior
Minister Eskandar Momeni, according to the military’s press wing. He is
expected to take part in discussions that will cover U.S.-Iran negotiations,
said a Pakistani security official familiar with the matter who asked not to be
identified because the information isn’t public.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said
there had been “slight progress” in negotiations. “I don’t want to exaggerate
it, but there’s been a little bit of movement, and that’s good,” he told the
media at a meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Sweden on Friday.
Trump told reporters at the White House
that Iran was “dying to make a deal.” The president has threatened further
attacks on the Islamic Republic if it doesn’t agree to terms acceptable to the
U.S.
Since the ceasefire went into effect six
weeks ago, Trump has veered between assurances that a peace accord was almost
at hand and threats of new aerial assaults.
At the same time, opposition to the war
has heightened among Americans upset about the sharp rise in gasoline prices as
the conflict disrupts global energy markets. Those anxieties, reflected in
several polls, have resonated on Capitol Hill, months before midterm elections
that will determine control of Congress.
Earlier this week, the Republican-led
Senate signaled mounting opposition to continuing the war with a procedural
vote. On Thursday, the party’s leaders abruptly canceled a vote on the conflict
as GOP absences threatened an embarrassing defeat for the president.
Yet Senator Roger Wicker, the chairman of
the Senate Armed Services Committee, cautioned that Trump was being
“ill-advised to pursue a deal that would not be worth the paper it is written
on.”
“Our commander-in-chief needs to allow
America’s skilled armed forces to finish the destruction of Iran’s conventional
military capabilities and reopen the strait,” Wicker said in a statement on
Friday.
He was referring to the Strait of Hormuz,
the crucial passageway for global energy supplies that, along with Iran’s
nuclear program, have been major obstacles in the diplomacy.
Iran’s ambassador to France, Mohammad
Amin-Nejad, told Bloomberg on Wednesday that his country was discussing with
Oman some form of permanent toll system in the strait, which the U.S. calls
unacceptable.
Rubio said that would set a precedent for
other areas of the world and that no country should accept the imposition of
tolls in Hormuz.
Aside from Hormuz, the U.S. has repeatedly
demanded Tehran hand over its enriched uranium and commit to ending enrichment
for at least a decade. Iranian leaders have publicly rejected that, citing a
right to the process under international agreements.
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More Iran war news:
- Japan, one of Asia’s largest importers of energy from
the Middle East, flagged the impending arrival of its first oil shipment
from the Persian Gulf since the war began.
- Iran claimed 35 ships crossed Hormuz in the past day
after obtaining permission, ISNA reports citing an IRGC statement.
- Iran has destroyed more than two dozen MQ-9 Reaper
drones operated by U.S. forces since the war began, according to a person
with direct knowledge of the matter. That represents 20 per cent of the
Pentagon’s prewar inventory for the hard-to-replace unmanned system.
https://nationalpost.com/news/world/israel-middle-east/arab-nations-seek-iran-war-end
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