The Trump administration expressed optimism yesterday about reaching a deal to end the war with Iran, while also warning of increasing economic pressure against Tehran if it remains defiant.
President Donald Trump has said he believes the war he launched with Israel in late February is nearly over, even as a shipping blockade he announced came into effect and traffic through the Strait of Hormuz remained well below normal levels.
The US warned it could add secondary sanctions on buyers of Iranian oil in an apparent effort to gain leverage ahead of more negotiations, just weeks after Washington loosened the enforcement of some Iran energy sanctions.
US and Iranian officials were weighing a return to Pakistan for further talks as early as the coming weekend, after negotiations ended on Sunday without a breakthrough. Mediator Pakistan’s army chief arrived in Tehran yesterday to try to prevent a renewal of the conflict.
“We feel good about the prospects of a deal,” White House Press secretary Karoline Leavitt said at a news conference, calling conversations mediated by Pakistan ‘productive and ongoing’. She denied reports that the US had formally requested an extension of a two-week ceasefire agreed by the two sides on April 8.
More in-person talks had not yet been confirmed but would likely take place in Pakistan again, Leavitt said. Pakistan’s military confirmed Field Marshal Asim Munir had arrived in Tehran.
A senior Iranian source told Reuters that Munir, who had mediated the last round of talks, would seek ‘to narrow gaps’ between the two sides. Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi posted on X welcoming Munir and said Iran was committed to ‘promoting peace and stability in the region’.
The talks last weekend broke down without an agreement to end the war, which Trump began alongside Israel on February 28, triggering Iranian attacks on Gulf neighbours and reigniting a conflict between Israel and Iran-backed Hizbollah in Lebanon.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, speaking alongside Leavitt, predicted that China’s purchase of Iranian oil would ‘pause’ given the US blockade on vessels calling at Iranian ports. He said the US could impose secondary sanctions on countries that purchase Iranian crude.
The US Treasury had warned two Chinese banks not to process Iranian money or face sanctions, he said, without naming the banks. China previously bought more than 80 per cent of Iran’s shipped oil.
“The Iranians should know that this is going to be the financial equivalent of what we saw in the kinetic activities,” Bessent said, referring to the US and Israeli campaign of air strikes that killed a number of Iranian leaders and damaged its defensive capacities and navy.
He also said the US would not renew waivers that allowed the purchase of some Russian and Iranian oil without facing US sanctions. The moves signal an end to the Trump administration’s efforts to use the waivers to free up more oil supplies and lower soaring global energy prices. The war has led Iran to effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz – a vital artery for global crude and gas shipments – to ships other than its own, sharply reducing exports from the Gulf and leaving energy importers scrambling for alternative supplies.
Iran could consider allowing ships to sail freely through the Omani side of the strait without risk of attack as part of proposals it has offered in negotiations with the US, providing a deal is clinched to prevent renewed conflict, a source briefed by Tehran said.
Finance ministers from almost a dozen countries led by Britain called on the US, Israel and Iran to implement their ceasefire in full and said the conflict would weigh on the global economy and markets even if it was resolved soon.
During the first 48 hours of the US blockade on ships entering and exiting Iranian ports, no vessels have made it past US forces, the US military said. Additionally, nine vessels complied with direction from US forces to turn around and return towards an Iranian port or coastal area.
The US-sanctioned tanker Rich Starry made its way back to the Strait of Hormuz yesterday after exiting the Gulf the day before, shipping data showed, failing to break through the US blockade on vessels calling at Iranian ports.
The Chinese-owned tanker was among at least eight ships crossing the waterway on Tuesday, the first day of the US blockade.
A US destroyer stopped two oil tankers attempting to leave the Iranian port of Chabahar on the Gulf of Oman on Tuesday, a US official said.