News
21/04/26
Hormuz remains blocked under new ceasefire: Update 3
Updates with changes throughout Washington, 21 April (Argus) — The strait of
Hormuz remains largely closed to navigation and the US naval blockade of Iranian
trade continues despite a ceasefire that President Donald Trump said on Tuesday
will continue indefinitely, to give Iranian leaders time to craft a proposal to
end the conflict. The US will "extend the Ceasefire until such time as their
proposal is submitted, and discussions are concluded, one way or the other,"
Trump wrote in a social media post at 4:09pm ET (20:09 GMT). The earlier US-Iran
ceasefire was scheduled to expire at 7:50pm ET (23:50 GMT) on Tuesday, Pakistan
said earlier in the day. The Trump administration is casting the extension of
the ceasefire with Iran and maintaining the naval blockade as economically
damaging for Tehran. "In a matter of days, Kharg island storage will be full and
the fragile Iranian oil wells will be shut in," treasury secretary Scott Bessent
said on Tuesday. "Constraining Iran's maritime trade directly targets the
regime's primary revenue lifelines." But the Trump administration has no
immediate solution for addressing much larger production shut-ins across the
Mideast Gulf and the resulting spike in oil and gas prices globally. Global oil
demand has fallen by about 4mn b/d since the start of the war in the Mideast
Gulf, compared with supply losses of around 12mn b/d, trading firm Vitol's chief
executive Russell Hardy said on Tuesday. Uncertainty over the course of the
US-Iran confrontation pushed May Nymex WTI up by 3pc to $98.48/bl on Tuesday. US
energy secretary Chris Wright, who over the weekend suggested that oil prices
would remain elevated through 2027, has had to change his messaging after Trump
insisted on Monday that prices would decline as soon as he secures a deal with
Iran, which he suggested would happen quickly. "I don't know the future of
energy prices," Wright told a Senate panel on Tuesday, but he added that US
retail gasoline prices "peaked about a week or so ago". Tehran, too, appears to
believe that it holds the upper hand in the confrontation with Washington. "If
the US wants to maintain the shadow of war, it must also consider the strait of
Hormuz completely closed," Iran's Tasnim news agency, which is linked to Iran's
Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, said in an opinion piece soon after Trump's
ceasefire announcement. Officials in Tehran did not immediately react to Trump's
announcement of a ceasefire extension. Tehran did not request an extension and
will not reopen the strait of Hormuz as long as the US naval blockade continues
"and, if necessary, (Iran) will break the blockade by force", Tasnim said. Trump
said Pakistani leaders — who are mediating the peace talks — asked him to hold
off on attacks so that Iran's leadership — which he claimed was "fractured" —
could come up with a "unified proposal". Trump said the US military will
continue its naval blockade against Iran and remain "ready and able". The US
naval blockade, in effect since 13 April, has forced 28 Iranian vessels to turn
around and return to ports in Iran, the Pentagon said on Tuesday. The US Navy
seized a tanker carrying Iranian crude in the Indian Ocean on Tuesday, two days
after disabling and boarding an Iran-flagged vessel in the Arabian Sea.
"Blockading Iranian ports is an act of war and thus a violation of the
ceasefire," Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araqchi said hours before Trump's
announcement. "Striking a commercial vessel and taking its crew hostage is an
even greater violation," Araqchi said. "I sincerely hope that both sides will
continue to observe the ceasefire and be able to conclude a comprehensive ‘Peace
Deal' during the second round of talks scheduled at Islamabad for a permanent
end to the conflict," Pakistani prime minister Shehbaz Sharif said in a social
media post Tuesday, after Trump's announcement. Sharif did not specify when the
US and Iranian delegates will meet next. US vice president JD Vance, who led the
unsuccessful round of talks with an Iranian delegation on 11-12 April, is no
longer planning to head to Pakistan on Tuesday for another round, the White
House said after Trump's ceasefire announcement. By Haik Gugarats and Chris
Knight Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com
Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.