Trump is halting US efforts to steer ships through the Strait of Hormuz in an effort to confront Iran

President Donald Trump says he has temporarily halted US efforts to navigate the missing ships in the Strait of Hormuz in order to finalize the Iran deal.
Trump announced the decision on social media Tuesday evening, saying he was putting it on hold to make room for U.S. efforts to finalize a deal with Iran.
Trump said in the post that he made the move based on “the request of Pakistan and other countries, the significant military success we have had during the campaign against Iran, and, in addition, the fact that significant progress has been made on the Comprehensive and Final Agreement with Iran’s representatives.”
He added that the US blockade of Iranian ports will continue.
“We have mutually agreed that, while the Blockade will remain in full force, Project Freedom (the Movement of Ships through the Strait of Hormuz) will be temporarily suspended to see if the Agreement can be finalized and signed or not,” he wrote.
Goals achieved, said Rubio
Earlier on Tuesday, the US Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, on Tuesday said that the United States has achieved its objectives in its military campaign against Iran, despite not having found Tehran’s rich uranium, and that the effort to ensure the safe passage of oil through the Strait of Hormuz was a different, smaller, defensive operation.
His comments about the short-term US effort appeared to be aimed at criticism from members of Congress who say Trump effectively violated the provisions of the War Powers Resolution, a 1973 law that allows the president 60 days to hold a war before ending it.
The war in Iran began with an air attack launched by Israel and the United States on February 28.
Trump formally notified Congress of the conflict 48 hours later, triggering a 60-day deadline, which was last Friday, to end the war or sue Congress for an extension.
The White House met the requirement by announcing Friday that hostilities under Operation Epic Fury had been terminated, and Rubio escalated that argument today.
“The operation is over. Epic Fury – as the president reported to Congress – we’re done with that phase of it,” he said. “Now we are in this Project of Freedom.”
‘Defensive performance’
Rubio insisted that the US was acting only in self-defense in enforcing its blockade of Iranian ports.
“We only respond when we are attacked first. This is a defensive operation,” Rubio said. “If no shots are fired at these ships and no shots are fired at us, we will not fire. But if we are fired upon, we will respond.”
Rubio said the United States is in contact with a number of ships about helping to get them out of the port, echoing comments made earlier Tuesday by US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.
Until Israel and the US attacked Iran, the Strait of Hormuz was fully open.
So far only two ships, both US-flagged merchant vessels, are known to have passed since Iran successfully blocked the channel.
Joe Sestak, the former deputy head of the US military, says that ships stuck in the Strait of Hormuz may be reluctant to accept US President Donald Trump’s proposal to direct them due to uncertainty about the US plan and Iran’s ability to continue restricting traffic through the crisis.
10 sailors died, Rubio said
Ten sailors have died as a result of the ongoing conflict in the crisis, Rubio said, adding that the US will continue to send its assets to protect freedom of navigation in the critical waterway.
Before the US and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28, about 20 percent of the world’s oil was going through this crisis every day. Hundreds of ships with thousands of sailors stayed for weeks in the Persian Gulf.
“They’re alone, they’re starving, they’re in danger and at least 10 sailors have died because of that, they’re human sailors,” Rubio said, without giving further details.
The UAE is still under attack
The United Arab Emirates also said it was under attack by Iranian missiles and non-aligned aircraft on Tuesday, as Washington said a fragile ceasefire was in place.
Rubio said it was time for Tehran to “accept the reality of the situation,” adding that US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner were continuing to look for a diplomatic solution.
That solution would have to deal with whatever nuclear material Iran may have buried “somewhere,” Rubio said.
“The president has made it clear that part of the discussion should not only be about enrichment, but what happens to this thing that is buried in a certain place that they still cannot reach if they want to dig it up,” he said.
Rubio declined to give details on what progress had been made and said a real deal would not have to be written in one day.
“This is very complicated, and it is very complicated, but we have to have a diplomatic solution that is very clear about the topics they are willing to discuss and the level and the agreements they are willing to make in the beginning so that those discussions are beneficial,” he said.
The Trump administration says the ceasefire between the US and Iran remains in place, even though both sides have launched strikes in recent days. Both countries also want to control the important Strait of Hormuz.
China’s role
As Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi prepares to visit China on Wednesday, Rubio says he hopes Tehran’s allies in Beijing will reiterate the need for Iran to stop interfering in the vital waterway as the fragile ceasefire continues.
“I hope the Chinese tell him what needs to be told,” Rubio said in response to a reporter’s question about the upcoming visit. “And what you do in the dirt causes you to be separated from the rest of the world. You are bad at this.”
The secretary went on to say that China, more than the US, is suffering because of Iran’s actions in this crisis, and he said that the world’s power is an externally driven economy that depends on exports that pass through Hormuz.
“It is in China’s interest that Iran stop blocking the flow,” he added.





