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The Economic Times
The Economic Times

US insists Iran commit to stopping attacks in Hormuz strait, say US officials

The United States is demanding that Iran publicly state it will stop attacks on ships in the Strait of Hormuz and that all lanes in the strait will be open to shipping with no tolls, senior U.S. officials said on Friday.

Iran has adamantly refused to give up control of the strait, the strategic waterway through which a fifth of the world's oil supply typically flows.

Also read: Trump shuts door on Iran ceasefire, raising doubts over diplomatic path

The U.S. officials said conversations between the two countries had ‌been productive in ⁠recent days. ⁠They made the comments to a small group of reporters in a conference call.

"What we're demanding is that the Iranians issue a public statement that acknowledges all channels of the Strait of Hormuz are open and they're not shooting at ships anymore. They're either going to give us that statement or we're not having a good outcome for them," one official said.

Iran has told Washington that recent attacks on shipping in the strait were from "an errant part of their system," one senior official said.

There appears to be a ⁠power struggle unfolding ‌in real time between hardliners in Iran and pragmatists, an official said.

Three Qatari and Saudi commercial tankers came under fire this week, prompting the U.S. to hit Iranian sites, ⁠and Iran to respond with strikes on U.S. military sites in Gulf states. U.S. President Donald Trump has declared that a June ceasefire the two sides signed is over.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi will travel to Oman on Saturday for talks on bilateral relations and regional developments, particularly the situation in the strait, Iran's official news agency IRNA reported.

"We are hoping to get to a place where they publicly say that they will stop shooting at ships and sort of explicitly or at least implicitly acknowledging that they screwed up. We are working on that ‌now," one official said.

Also read: US official says 'technical talks' continue with Iran, no new strikes in past hours

"The president has directed us to talk but as he's shown a willingness to do, if they keep on shooting at ships or they engage on any other hostile acts, then we're going ⁠to hit 'em back," the official said.

The fundamental demand from the U.S. side is that Iran turn over its nuclear materials. Tehran is believed to possess more than 900 pounds of highly enriched uranium, which Trump and other U.S. officials call "nuclear dust."

The nuclear issue is supposed to be dealt with under a 60-day period for negotiations based on a memorandum of understanding that was signed in June by the two countries.

"I just want to be clear here that if we don't get the dust, we do not have a deal with Iran," one official said.

The official said "we have a lot of options" if Iran refuses, including military and economic options.

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