In Brief
The U.S. and Iran agreed to stop exchanging fire around the Strait of Hormuz and resume peace talks, with fresh high-level meetings now set for Doha instead of Switzerland. The White House said Witkoff and Kushner will travel to Qatar for talks, while Iran’s deputy foreign minister said no formal meetings with U.S. officials are scheduled, though consultations with Qatari mediators continue. The deal followed recent attacks and counterstrikes around Hormuz, where both sides remain divided over who controls passage through the strait. The June preliminary framework was meant to open Hormuz and move issues such as Iran’s nuclear program, frozen assets, and sanctions to a later phase. A U.S. official said ships will now move freely through the strait, and the main test in Doha is whether the ceasefire can hold long enough to keep negotiations on track.
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The latest
The U.S. and Iran agreed to stop exchanging fire around the Strait of Hormuz, and Trump announced a fresh round of talks in Doha on Tuesday — a sudden diplomatic pivot away from Switzerland, where the next round was originally expected.
Details
• Reuters: The White House confirmed Witkoff and Kushner will travel to Doha for high-level meetings on Iran, with technical talks running on the sidelines. Press secretary Karoline Leavitt told Fox News that Washington remains committed to the preliminary agreement but warned that any new aggression will be met with force.
• Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi denied that any formal meetings with U.S. officials are scheduled in Qatar — while acknowledging that consultations with Qatari mediators are continuing. The gap between Washington's account and Tehran's signals the meeting's shape remains unsettled.
• The Wall Street Journal, citing U.S. officials and people familiar with the negotiations, said both sides agreed to halt days of fighting around Hormuz and resume peace talks — a deal reached after an escalation that began Thursday and threatened to unravel the June framework.
• The immediate trigger: Iran struck the M/T Kiku, a Panama-flagged tanker carrying Qatar Energy crude, then hit a second commercial vessel days earlier. The U.S. responded with strikes on Iranian communications sites, drones, and missile positions along the strait's coast. Iran widened its response with attacks on the U.S. Ali Al Salem airbase in Kuwait and the Fifth Fleet's port in Bahrain.
• The core dispute is over who controls Hormuz. Washington wants unrestricted passage through the southern route near Oman. Tehran insists on a central role in managing traffic — directing vessels through lanes closer to its coastline — and has used that leverage consistently throughout the war.
• The June preliminary deal was supposed to open the strait and push the harder files — Iran's nuclear program, frozen assets, sanctions — into a second negotiating phase. The latest clashes showed Hormuz is not a technical footnote but a strategic pressure point Tehran will not easily release.
• Before the Doha pivot, Switzerland was the agreed venue for resuming technical talks. The shift hands Qatar and Pakistan a larger mediation role at a critical moment.
• A U.S. official said ships will now move freely through Hormuz — a strait that carried roughly 20% of global oil supply before the crisis.
What to watch
Doha's first test is not a new agreement — it's keeping the ceasefire from collapsing. If Witkoff and Kushner can stabilize the Hormuz situation and get technical teams back to the table, the track toward nuclear and financial negotiations stays alive. If the dispute over who manages the strait remains unresolved, Doha risks becoming a short stop before the next round of escalation.