- US forces conducted overnight self-defense strikes in southern Iran targeting missile launch sites and boats attempting to lay mines in the Strait of Hormuz; the IRGC said it fired on an F-35 and drones that entered Iranian airspace, claimed it shot down an MQ-9 Reaper drone, and reported several Iranian personnel were killed near Larak Island.
- Brent crude rose 3.8% to just below $100/barrel Tuesday on the renewed violence, though prices remain down on the week as markets continue to price in eventual deal progress; Rubio said talks would “take a few days” due to disputes over “specific language in the initial document.”
- Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei — 56, appointed in March, not seen publicly since — issued a warning that “nations and lands of the region will no longer be a shield for American bases,” without directly criticizing the military exchange or signaling new stumbling blocks in negotiations.
- Key unresolved issues: the scope of frozen Iranian asset releases, whether Hormuz transit will be free or fee-based (“navigation services”), where Iran’s highly enriched uranium stockpiles go (Russia and China are the likely candidates), and whether Israel must halt operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon as Iran demands.
What Happened?
Hours after Trump posted that Iran negotiations were “proceeding nicely,” US and Iranian forces exchanged fire near the Strait of Hormuz in what both sides framed as defensive actions. The US military said it struck missile launch sites and boats attempting to mine the strait. The IRGC said it engaged an F-35 and drones it claimed had entered Iranian airspace, and said it shot down a US MQ-9 Reaper drone. Israel’s military said it was not involved. Iran’s Parliament Speaker and central bank governor were simultaneously in Doha meeting with Qatari officials on frozen asset releases — the diplomatic and military tracks running in parallel. Secretary Rubio, in India, said negotiations are ongoing and that disputes over document language would take “a few days” to resolve before any framework could be announced.
Why It Matters?
The overnight exchange reveals how close the ceasefire is to breaking down entirely, even as both governments publicly claim talks are on track. The IRGC’s mine-laying operation — the act that triggered the US response — suggests either that Iran’s military is acting outside the political track’s instructions, or that Tehran is deliberately maintaining pressure to extract better terms. The enriched uranium question is the hardest: Trump wants it handed over or destroyed; Iran has publicly rejected that, but signaled it may transfer the stockpiles to Russia or China — a proposal Washington is unlikely to accept as equivalent to dismantlement. Lebanon adds another layer: Iran insists on a Hezbollah ceasefire as part of any deal, but Netanyahu announced Monday that Israel will intensify Lebanon strikes, not pause them. Arab Gulf states — Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar — are privately urging Trump not to restart the war, having absorbed tens of billions in drone and missile damage before the April truce.
What’s Next?
Rubio’s “few days” timeline suggests the administration believes an interim framework — likely a ~60-day ceasefire extension and Hormuz reopening agreement — is close but not yet finalized. The Doha channel (Iran’s parliament speaker plus central bank governor meeting Qatari officials) is the live thread on frozen assets, while Pakistan continues its intermediary role. Any agreement would merely be a starting gun for the harder nuclear negotiations that follow — and both the US hawks (Graham, Cruz, Wicker) and Iran’s hardliners have incentives to blow up the process before it reaches that stage. Watch for whether a formal ceasefire extension announcement comes before the end of the week, and whether Khamenei’s warning statement signals that the supreme leader is about to impose tighter constraints on Iran’s negotiating position.
Source: Bloomberg











