Commuters walk past a tiled image of current leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei near a Tehran subway station on May 9.

Despite Latest US Proposal For Peace, Iran's Officials Remain Hard-Line

by · Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty · Join

Iranian media said Tehran has sent a response to the latest US peace proposal, but the country's officials have maintained belligerent stance toward the United States.

Iran's official news agency, IRNA, reported that the counterproposal focused "on ending the war in the region," as other state media said it included ending all fronts of the war, especially in Lebanon.

While there was no immediate comment on the reports from Tehran or Washington, Reuters reported that a Pakistani government official involved in mediating the talks said Islamabad had received the response and sent it to the United States.

Meanwhile, Iran's hard-line Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) had earlier responded with anger to the continuation of the US naval blockade of Iranian ports.

The IRGC threatened that "any attack on Iranian tankers and commercial vessels will result in a heavy attack on one of the American centers in the region and enemy ships."

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The statement came a day after US strikes disabled two Iranian-flagged tankers in the Gulf of Oman that Washington accused of attempting to violate its blockade of Iranian ports.

The US Central Command (CENTCOM) on May 9 said its naval blockade "continues to be fully enforced" and that it has redirected 58 commercial vessels and disabled four others since April 13 "to prevent the ships from entering or leaving Iranian ports."

Iranian Leadership Questions

The US-Israeli air strikes launched on February 28 have wiped out much of the Iranian leadership, prompting US President Donald Trump to call the regime "messed up" and without clear rulers.

Some observers have said the IRGC has increased its power and has opposed more moderate leaders who have sought to reach an agreement with US negotiators.

On May 8, both Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio said they were waiting for an imminent replay to the latest US offer, reportedly a one-page memorandum that would end the fighting and open the crucial Strait of Hormuz but would leave several key issues -- including Iran's right to enrich uranium -- for later discussions.

Despite later Iranian media reports about Tehran's response, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi released a tersely worded statement questioning Washington's seriousness in the talks.

"The recent escalation of tensions by American forces in the Persian Gulf and their numerous actions in violating the cease-fire have added to suspicions about the motivation and seriousness of the American side in the path of diplomacy," Araqchi said, according to the semiofficial ISNA news agency.

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Rubio defended recent US military action in the Persian Gulf and rejected Iranian efforts to regulate shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic maritime route that accounts for around one-fifth of global oil and gas supplies.

"Iran now claims that they own, that they have a right to control, an international waterway.... That's an unacceptable thing that they're trying to normalize," Rubio said after reports that Tehran had established an agency to approve vessel passage through the strait.

Separately, Trump said that American military operations against Iran may not be over, suggesting the United States could still target additional sites if necessary.

"I said they were defeated, but that doesn't mean they're done. We could go in for another two weeks and hit every single target," he added.

With reporting by RFE/RL's Radio Farda, Reuters, and AFP

 
Despite Latest US Proposal For Peace, Iran's Officials Remain Hard-Line

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