Iran Claims Control Over Hormuz as Washington Warns Against Further Attacks

Summary: The Wall Street Journal reported that Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Iran is responsible for managing and fully restoring maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, and that no other country or entity has authority over the matter. Iran’s interpretation of a preliminary agreement with Trump conflicts with the U.S. view that Iran does not control the international waterway and that navigation must remain unimpeded. The article says the dispute follows several days of strikes between Tehran and Washington after Iran attacked ships near Oman’s coastline, and that Iran has urged commercial vessels to use a route closer to its own coast. The fighting has unsettled shipowners and stalled expected talks in Switzerland, while the agreement’s central goal was to restore traffic through Hormuz and move on to later negotiations over issues including Iran’s nuclear program. The article says the deal assigns Iran responsibility for arranging safe passage for commercial vessels and for determining future terms for administration and maritime services in consultation with regional parties, while also requiring military obstacles to be removed and traffic to resume immediately. U.S. officials said further attacks would not be tolerated, and the article says recent strikes have widened the confrontation around the Gulf, with maritime traffic still far below prewar levels.

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What’s next?

The central dispute now is over the meaning of the preliminary agreement itself: whether it gives Iran a limited role in arranging the reopening of the strait, or something closer to practical authority over maritime traffic.

If Tehran continues to impose preferred routes on vessels, and Washington responds militarily to each attack, Hormuz could shift from a ceasefire mechanism into a recurring flashpoint.

If talks resume in Switzerland, the administration of the strait will be the first major test of whether the agreement can survive before the two sides move to more difficult files, especially Iran’s nuclear program.