Iran, Kharg Island and Trump
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The U.S.-Iran war appears to have no end in sight, as it hit its 100-day mark over the weekend despite President Trump’s campaign promises to keep the U.S. out of long-term foreign conflicts. Trump denied ever promising not to start any new wars and disputed that Washington’s conflict with Tehran constituted an “endless war” during
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100 days of US-Israel-Iran war, but still no deal in sight
India, June 14 -- As Gulf tensions deepen, stalled negotiations risk prolonging conflict and destabilising global economies.
The United States wants Iran to halt uranium enrichment for 20 years and ship out its stockpiles to the US. Iran wants an end to strikes, security guarantees, war reparations and recognition of its sovereignty over Hormuz — terms Washington has rejected.
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For years, US war games predicted exactly how Iran would respond to a major attack. Yet when war came in 2026, Washington appeared unprepared for Tehran’s most powerful move: tightening its grip on the world’s most important oil chokepoint.
The Iran war is making Venezuela look pretty good to the oil industry right now. The Strait of Hormuz has been all but shuttered for months, thwarting oil shipments and squeezing global supply. And while President Donald Trump announced a peace deal Sunday to open the key route, oil shipping companies remain wary of using it.
