- The US and Iran agreed to halt days of tit-for-tat strikes around the Strait of Hormuz and resume peace talks, potentially at a Doha summit as early as Tuesday, after Iran attacked two commercial vessels and the US struck Iranian drone, missile, and communications sites along the coast.
- Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi claimed sole authority over Hormuz Sunday — “No other country or entity has any responsibility or authority in this matter” — directly contradicting US arguments that the June 17 memorandum of understanding grants Iran no such control over the international waterway.
- Trump issued a stark social media threat — “If that happens, the Islamic Republic of Iran will no longer exist!” — as the US-UK Joint Maritime Information Center raised its Hormuz threat level to “substantial.”
- Iran’s Assembly of Experts called for closing the strait if Israel doesn’t halt Lebanon operations, and Hezbollah rejected a US-brokered Israel-Lebanon peace framework signed Friday — widening the web of unresolved conflicts underlying the fragile ceasefire.
What Happened?
Days of escalating violence around the Strait of Hormuz ended Sunday with the US and Iran agreeing to halt fighting and return to peace talks. The latest round of hostilities began Thursday when Iran attacked a commercial vessel using the US-backed Omani route through the strait; the US responded with strikes on Iranian drone, missile, and communications sites along the Hormuz coast; Iran then attacked Kuwait and Bahrain. In all, Iran struck two vessels — a containership and a tanker carrying Qatari oil. US-Iran talks scheduled for the weekend in Switzerland stalled over the fighting. A new summit in Doha could take place as early as Tuesday and would focus on Hormuz; a hotline agreed upon in Switzerland to prevent miscalculation has not yet been activated.
Why It Matters?
The Strait of Hormuz is the chokepoint through which 20% of the world’s crude oil once flowed, and Iranian attacks have kept traffic at a fraction of prewar levels. The ceasefire is welcome, but the underlying dispute is unresolved: Iran insists it has sole authority over the strait — a reading the US flatly rejects. Iran’s Assembly of Experts has simultaneously called for closing the strait over Israel’s Lebanon operations, and Hezbollah rejected the US-brokered Israel-Lebanon peace framework signed Friday. These interlinked pressures mean the Hormuz ceasefire sits atop a web of unresolved conflicts that could reignite at any moment.
What’s Next?
A Doha summit could take place as early as Tuesday, focusing on Hormuz before the harder issues — Iran’s nuclear program — move to a second phase of talks. The US-Iran hotline needs to be activated urgently to prevent miscalculation. Trump’s warning that Iran could “no longer exist” and UN Ambassador Mike Waltz’s Fox News statement that the US won’t tolerate further attacks signal patience is running thin. Brent crude, which fell below $73 as traffic continued flowing, will be closely watched as traders gauge whether this ceasefire holds.
Source: The Wall Street Journal













