- US and Israeli jets struck Iranian vessels attempting to lay mines and missile launch sites in the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, killing several Iranian personnel according to Iran’s state-run Nour News — even as Trump posted that negotiations were “proceeding nicely.”
- US Central Command described the strikes as defensive, saying they were intended “to protect our troops from threats posed by Iranian forces”; Brent crude climbed back above $98/barrel after the news, reversing much of Monday’s 7%+ Iran-deal-hope-driven drop.
- A major unresolved sticking point: the US demands Iran end all uranium enrichment and surrender its highly enriched stockpile; Al Arabiya reported Tehran is seeking guarantees from China before proceeding, and wants the uranium transferred there rather than to the US or destroyed in place.
- Iran’s Parliament Speaker and central bank governor traveled to Doha for talks with Qatari officials on releasing frozen Iranian funds, while Pakistan’s army chief also headed to Doha — both signals that the diplomatic track is active even as the military one remains live.
What Happened?
Hours after Trump declared Iran negotiations were “proceeding nicely,” US and Israeli jets struck Iranian boats attempting to mine the Strait of Hormuz and hit missile launch sites near Bandar Abbas, killing several IRGC personnel. US Central Command called the strikes defensive. Iran’s semi-official news agencies confirmed the attack south of Larak Island. Markets whipsawed: Brent crude, which had fallen more than 7% earlier Monday on deal optimism, recovered to near $98/barrel on the news. Secretary of State Rubio, traveling in New Delhi, said talks could take “several days” and that Trump would either get a good deal or walk away entirely. Separately, Iran’s Parliament Speaker led a delegation to Doha to discuss frozen asset releases, and Pakistan’s army chief — who has played an intermediary role — also arrived in Doha.
Why It Matters?
The Monday exchange illustrates the core problem with the current diplomatic moment: the ceasefire is holding in name only, with both sides continuing to take military actions they frame as defensive. Iran was caught laying mines in the world’s most important oil chokepoint during active peace negotiations — either a signal of bad faith or a sign that the IRGC is operating independently of the political track in Tehran. The uranium question is the hardest nut: the US wants enrichment ended and stockpiles surrendered; Iran reportedly wants its uranium sent to China as a guarantor rather than handed to the US or destroyed — a demand Washington is unlikely to accept. Meanwhile Israel, not a party to the US-Iran talks, is intensifying strikes on Hezbollah in Lebanon, and Iran has made an end to Israeli-Hezbollah hostilities a condition of any peace deal — adding another layer of complexity the current framework has not addressed.
What’s Next?
Rubio’s “several days” timeline for talks suggests the administration believes a framework deal is possible before the current ceasefire frays further, but the gap between the sides on uranium, frozen assets, Hezbollah, and Hormuz management is wide. Iran’s softened position on transit tolls — rebranded as “navigation services” rather than outright tolls — is a potential face-saving compromise worth watching. The Doha talks on frozen funds and the Pakistan intermediary channel are the live diplomatic threads. Watch for whether a formal ceasefire extension is announced before the current pause collapses under the weight of continued military incidents — and whether China’s rumored role as uranium guarantor becomes a formal part of any deal structure.
Source: Bloomberg











