(March 26): US President Donald Trump threatened Iran with intensified military action after Tehran rejected Washington’s push for peace talks, a sign he’s not backing down in the near month-long war that has upended energy and financial markets.
Iran had “better get serious soon, before it is too late, because once that happens, there is no turning back, and it won’t be pretty!” Trump posted on social media on Thursday. Negotiators “are ‘begging’ us to make a deal”, the president said, “yet they publicly state that they are only ‘looking at our proposal’. Wrong!”
Iran’s state-owned Press TV said the country is seeking certain guarantees to end the conflict, including that the US and Israel won’t resume their attacks. The payment of reparations for war damages and recognition of Tehran’s authority over the Strait of Hormuz are other conditions.
None of those are part of Washington’s 15-point proposal that people familiar with the matter said Pakistan, which is mediating the negotiation, has delivered to the Islamic Republic.
Trump’s threat of escalation came after the White House ordered more troops to the region, with some set to arrive before week’s end. His comments are at odds with his claims Iran has been “militarily obliterated” during almost four weeks of bombardment, and demonstrate the pressure he’s under to end the conflict and get the critical Strait of Hormuz reopened for oil and gas flows.
Oil prices climbed as the developments erode optimism that a resolution to the war is imminent. Brent crude rose 5% to US$107 ($137.46) a barrel on Thursday. Stocks and bonds fell worldwide.
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Pakistan Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said on X that “US-Iran indirect talks are taking place through messages being relayed by Pakistan”.
Both sides kept up their air attacks on Thursday. The Israel Defense Forces completed a wave of strikes in the central Iranian city of Isfahan, while Iran’s state TV said the country had begun another wave of missile strikes against Israel.
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) said its air defences were responding to Iranian missile and drone threats, and two people were killed after debris from an intercepted missile fell in Abu Dhabi. Bahrain said an Iranian attack caused a fire at a facility in Muharraq.
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Iran is looking to formalise a transit fee for the Strait of Hormuz, with lawmakers working on a draft bill to impose a toll in exchange for providing security to ships passing via the key waterway, according to the Fars news agency.
Since the war started on Feb 28, Iran has effectively shuttered the conduit for about a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas, triggering a global supply shock. The Islamic Republic is still able to export its own crude from the strait, likely earning hundreds of millions of dollars of extra income.
Trump had set a deadline for Iran to negotiate an agreement to end the war by the end of the week, though the ongoing impasse has raised questions about the likelihood for a deal in that time frame. Vice President JD Vance may travel to Pakistan for Iran talks this weekend, CNN reported.
The conflict has led to surging fuel and fertiliser prices, and sparked fears of an inflation crisis and worldwide food shortages.
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) on Thursday sharply increased its inflation forecasts for major economies and now sees the average rate for the Group of 20 this year jumping to 4% — with an even higher pace in the US — rather than the 2.8% it predicted in December.
Trump has publicly signalled any peace agreement would have to include a prohibition on Iran ever obtaining a nuclear weapon or enriching radioactive material for civilian purposes.
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The US plan also stipulates that the Islamic Republic use a reduced missile arsenal in self-defence only, according to people familiar with the matter. Iran would receive certain concessions in return, including sanctions relief.
It’s still unclear who the US is negotiating with since several top Iranian government and military officials have been killed, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei on the conflict’s first day. On Monday, Axios identified Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf, Iran’s speaker of Parliament, as the likely front man for talks, though he denied negotiations have taken place.
There’s little clarity over whether Iran would immediately allow all commercial ships to safely transit the Strait of Hormuz without paying, as well as how Israel would respond to any deal. Israeli officials have said they will continue striking Iran for now.
“At this stage we are still at war, and when it might end, no one knows,” Israeli Energy Minister Eli Cohen told radio station Galey Israel. The Israeli military and “defence establishment have the stamina and determination to see this historic campaign, in whose midst we find ourselves, to its conclusion”.
Gulf states such as Saudi Arabia and the UAE are considering joining the war against Tehran, several people with knowledge of the situation said this week. They would only do so if the Islamic Republic attacks vital power and water infrastructure — a high threshold, the people said.
“We can’t let Iran hold the US, the United Arab Emirates and the global economy hostage,” UAE Ambassador to the US Yousef Al Otaiba wrote in a Wall Street Journal op-ed. “A simple ceasefire isn’t enough. We need a conclusive outcome that addresses Iran’s full range of threats.”
More than 4,500 people have been killed in the conflict, according to governments and non-government agencies. Around three-quarters of the fatalities have been in Iran, while almost 1,100 people have died in Lebanon, where Israel is fighting a parallel war against Iran-backed Hezbollah militants and has displaced more than a million people. Dozens have been killed in Israel and Arab Gulf states.
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