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#USIranClashOverCeasefireTalks
Washington put a 15-point ceasefire plan on the table, routed through Pakistani intermediaries, covering sanctions relief, nuclear rollback, missile limits, Strait of Hormuz access, and restrictions on Iran's support for armed groups. Tehran responded by calling the proposal one-sided and unfair. Iran's foreign minister said there was no intention to negotiate, while the military went further, stating Washington is in no position to set the terms.
Behind closed doors the picture is more complicated. Iranian officials have privately signaled some openness, and Tehran issued its own five-point counteroffer that would hand it formal sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz — the chokepoint through which roughly one-fifth of global oil supply moves. Iran also demanded that Lebanon be included in any deal.
Trump extended his pause on strikes against Iranian energy infrastructure by ten more days, saying talks are going well and that Tehran itself requested the delay. He also made clear the US would continue the campaign if no agreement is reached, framing it as Iran's choice. Paratroopers were simultaneously moved toward the region alongside a Marine contingent already en route, keeping military pressure alive at the negotiating table.
The conflict is now entering its fifth week. Iran has continued missile attacks and Israel has escalated its own military campaign, including a strike that killed the IRGC's naval commander. A new AP-NORC poll found most Americans believe the military action has gone too far, with public concern increasingly focused on rising fuel costs at home.
The gap between the two sides remains wide. The US wants verifiable nuclear limits and an open strait. Iran wants sovereignty, Lebanon included, and a war it can frame as ending on its own terms, not Washington's.