Hormuz remains closed as US blockade continues

Hormuz remains closed as US blockade continues

Online Desk

Published: 2026-04-23 12:47:48

Updated on: 2026-04-23 13:48:38

Iran vowed on Wednesday not to reopen the Strait of Hormuz so long as a US naval blockade remains in place despite a ceasefire extension, at the moment, it announced the seizure of two ships trying to cross the strategic waterway.

As the clock ticked for a return to the war that has engulfed the region, US President Donald Trump had said on Tuesday that he would maintain the truce to allow more time for Pakistani-brokered peace talks.

Iran said it welcomed the efforts by Pakistan but made no other comment on Trump’s announcement.

“A complete ceasefire only has meaning if it is not violated through a naval blockade,” said Iranian parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, who led Tehran’s delegation in the first round of talks in Islamabad.

“Reopening the Strait of Hormuz is not possible amid a blatant violation of the ceasefire,” he added.

Oil prices, which have soared since Israel and the US attacked Iran on 28 February, kept inching up from the uncertainty on whether war will resume, although US stock prices gained ground.

Trump had said he wanted to give time for Iran’s fractured leadership to come up with a proposal, in what many observers saw as a face-saving way to avoid renewed war.

Trump told the New York Post that talks could resume in Pakistan within two to three days, even though Iran has not confirmed participation and Vice President JD Vance put on hold his travel to Islamabad on Tuesday.

Trump also claimed that Iran at his request had halted alleged plans to execute eight women arrested over massive anti-government protests in the weeks before the attack.

But Iran’s judiciary described his remarks as false news, saying the women had never faced the death penalty.

Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards stated that they forced two ships to the Iranian shore from the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow gateway for one-fifth of the world’s oil.

“The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps naval force this morning identified and stopped in the Strait of Hormuz two violating ships,” the Guards stated in a statement.

They identified the vessels as the Panama-flagged container ship MSC Francesca and the Liberia-flagged Epaminondas.

Panama’s foreign ministry confirmed the seizure of the MSC Francesca, calling it a serious attack on maritime security and an unnecessary escalation.

UK-based maritime security monitors confirmed that three commercial vessels had reported incidents involving gunboats in the strait.

Among them, a container ship reported being fired upon by a Revolutionary Guards boat 15 nautical miles northeast of Oman, causing damage to the bridge but no casualties, UKMTO stated.

Under orders from Trump, the US Navy is attempting to block vessels heading to or from Iranian ports, seeking to ramp up pressure on the Iranian economy even without all-out war.

In the midst of the blockade, the Pentagon announced on Wednesday that the Secretary of the Navy, John Phelan, would leave immediately.

It gave no reason for his sudden departure, which is the latest removal of a senior officer under Trump’s combative Pentagon chief, Pete Hegseth.

Iran, in retaliation for being attacked, has said that vessels must seek permission to leave or enter the Gulf through the strait. It had earlier promised free passage during the ceasefire but returned to defiance after Trump announced the blockade.

The US Defence Department said on Tuesday that US forces had intercepted and boarded a state-sanctioned vessel.

After the ceasefire with Iran, the United States helped broker a truce between Israel and Lebanon, including Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Shia Muslim movement that had fired rockets into Israel in revenge for the attacks on its patron.

Despite the declared truce, Israeli strikes killed five more people on Wednesday, Lebanese media reported.

Amal Khalil, a journalist for the newspaper Al-Akhbar, was killed and her fellow reporter Zeinab Faraj wounded in an Israeli strike near the border, the daily reported.

French President Emmanuel Macron announced that a second French soldier, wounded in a weekend ambush against UN peacekeepers in Lebanon blamed on Hezbollah, had died.

A first soldier was shot dead in the Saturday ambush, for which Hezbollah has denied responsibility.

Israel and Lebanon, which have no diplomatic relations, will hold a second round of talks in Washington on Thursday.

Lebanon will request a one-month extension of the ceasefire during the meeting, a Lebanese official informed.

Lebanon will also seek an end to Israel’s bombing and destruction in the areas where it is present and a commitment to the ceasefire, speaking on the condition of anonymity given the sensitive nature of the talks, that official said.

Israeli attacks on Lebanon have killed more than 2,450 people since the start of the war, according to Lebanese authority.