Trump says he is losing patience with Iran

US President Donald Trump said on Friday his patience with Iran was running out and that ‌Chinese President Xi Jinping had agreed Tehran must reopen the Strait of Hormuz, but China gave no indication it would weigh in.

As he flew back from Beijing on Friday after two days ​of talks with Xi, Trump said ⁠he was considering whether to lift US sanctions on Chinese oil companies buying Iranian oil. China is the biggest buyer of Iranian oil.

His comments shed no ‌light on whether Beijing might use its influence with Tehran to ‌end a conflict it said should never have started. “I’m not asking for any favours because, when you ask for favors, you have to do favors in return,” Trump said, when asked by a reporter on board his plane whether Xi had made a firm commitment to put pressure on the Iranians to reopen the strait, a key waterway for oil shipments.

Trump says he is losing patience with Iran

US President Donald Trump shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing on Thursday. Reuters

Xi did not comment on his discussions with Trump about Iran, although China’s foreign ministry issued ‌a blunt statement outlining Beijing’s frustration with the Iran war.
“This conflict, which should never have happened, has no reason to continue,” the ministry said.

‘We want the straits open’

Iran effectively shut the strait to most shipping ⁠in response to US-Israeli attacks that began on February 28, causing an unprecedented disruption to global energy supplies.

The US paused its attacks on Iran last month but began a port blockade. Tehran said it would not unblock the strait until the US ended its blockade. Trump has threatened to attack Iran again if it does not agree to a deal.

“We don’t want them to have a nuclear weapon, we want the straits open,” Trump had said in Beijing, sitting alongside Xi. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said Tehran had received messages from the U.S. indicating Washington was willing to continue talks.

Trump says he is losing patience with Iran

US President Donald Trump boards Air Force One before his departure from Beijing Capital Airport in Beijing on Thursday. AFP

“We hope that, with the advancement of negotiations, we will reach a good conclusion so that the Strait of Hormuz can be completely secured and we can expedite the normalisation of traffic through the strait,” he told reporters in New Delhi.

Iran, which has long ​denied that it intends to build a nuclear weapon, has refused to end nuclear research or relinquish its hidden stockpile of enriched uranium, to Trump’s frustration. “I am not going to be ‌much more patient. They should make a deal,” Trump said in an interview aired on Thursday night on Fox News’ “Hannity” programme, suggesting the enriched uranium needed to be secured by the US for “public relations” rather than practical necessity. Oil prices rose around 3% to around $109 a barrel on concerns over a lack of progress in resolving the conflict.

US Treasury yields hit their highest in around a year as traders anticipated the Federal Reserve might need ⁠to hike rates to rein in inflationary pressures from the blockade.

After talks between Trump and Xi on Thursday, the White House said Xi had made clear China’s opposition to any Iranian effort to charge a toll for use of the strait.

Trump said Xi also promised not to send Iran military equipment. “That’s a big statement,” Trump said on “Hannity”.

Asked about US sanctions on Chinese oil refineries buying Iranian oil, Trump told reporters on his plane: “We talked about that and I’m going ​to make a decision ‌over the next few days.”

Iran does not trust the Americans

China has dismissed reports it had plans to supply weapons to Iran as “groundless smears,” but analysts doubt Xi will want to push Iran hard ‌or end support for its military, given its value as a strategic counterweight to the US.

Trump says he is losing patience with Iran

A Revolutionary Guard Navy (IRGC) speedboat approaches the cargo ship Epaminondas during what state media described as the seizure of one of two vessels accused of violations in the Strait of Hormuz, last month. File/AP

Talks on ending the war, which has become a liability for Trump ahead of US congressional elections in November, have been on hold since last week when Iran and the US each rejected the other’s most recent proposals. Iran would welcome Chinese input, Araqchi said on Friday, adding that Tehran was trying to give diplomacy a chance but did not trust the US, which has ‌curtailed previous rounds of talks ‌by launching air strikes.

Iran is prepared for a resumption of fighting as well as for diplomatic solutions, Araqchi said, ⁠reiterating that vessels not linked to states attacking his country could traverse the Strait of Hormuz if they coordinated with Iran.

Iran state media said on Friday that more ‌than 31 million Iranians had signed up for a campaign to demonstrate public readiness to defend the country in a conflict, as the country started weapons courses for pro-government volunteers.

Before the war, about a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas as well as fertiliser and other vital supplies passed through the strait. Attacks on shipping have prevented almost all ⁠traffic.

Thousands of Iranians were killed during the US and Israeli air strikes, and thousands have been killed in Lebanon in renewed fighting there between Israel and the Iran-backed group Hizbollah.

The US State Department announced on Friday that Israel and Lebanon had agreed to a 45-day extension of a fragile ceasefire, which had been due to expire on Sunday.

Hizbollah opposes the ⁠talks, in which Israel is insisting on the group’s disarmament.

Reuters

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