Middle East crisis live: US and Iran fail to reach a deal after marathon peace talks in Pakistan

2 days ago 14

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Trump attends UFC fight as Middle East peace talks stall

As US negotiations with Iran were hitting an impasse, the US president attended a UFC fight, Associated Press reported.

Donald Trump entered the Miami venue alongside UFC president Dana White and several members of the Trump family soon after 9pm local time. As a Kid Rock song blasted from the speakers, Trump walked to his seat, where secretary of state Marco Rubio was waiting. Also nearby was Sergio Gor, the US ambassador to India.

Vance announced less than half an hour later, at around 6.30am in Islamabad, that US and Iranian negotiating teams had failed to reach a peace deal.

NYT White House correspondent Katie Rogers, who noted via her colleague Tyler Pager on Air Force Two that officials were deferring to Trump for “further comment about what is next for the US war with Iran”, said Trump remained at the Miami arena until at least 11.28pm local time.

Paulo Costa talks with President Donald Trump after he won his fight at UFC 327 at the Kaseya Center in Miami
Paulo Costa talks with President Donald Trump after he won his fight at UFC 327. Photograph: Rebecca Blackwell/AP
President Donald Trump attends the UFC 327 at the Kaseya Center in Miami on Saturday 11 April
President Donald Trump attends the UFC 327 at the Kaseya Center in Miami on Saturday 11 April. Photograph: Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP

Trump shares article highlighting possibility of naval blockade

The US president, Donald Trump, has not yet formally commented on the breakdown of peace talks with Iran in Islamabad. But he just shared a link in a post on his Truth Social platform, to an article titled “The Trump card the president holds if Iran won’t bend: a naval blockade”.

The article – by John Solomon, a controversial veteran US journalist, and published on Solomon’s conservative Just the News website – cites experts who suggest Trump “simply could out-blockade Iran’s hold over the Strait of Hormuz”.

Stephanie Convery

Stephanie Convery

Australia’s foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, says it’s “disappointing” that peace talks have failed between the US and Iran, but has urged parties to return to negotiations as a matter of priority.

double quotation mark

It is disappointing that the Islamabad talks between the United States and Iran have ended without agreement.

The priority now must be to continue the ceasefire and return to negotiations. We continue to want to see a swift resolution to this conflict.

Any escalation in the conflict would impose an even greater human cost and further impact the global economy.

A spokesperson for the Iranian foreign ministry has commented on the negotiations in Islamabad, saying the talks were conducted in an atmosphere of mistrust, and it was unrealistic to believe an agreement could be reached in one session, Reuters reports.

Contact and consultation between Iran, Pakistan and other allies in the region would continue going forward, the spokesperson said.

Pakistan foreign minister says 'imperative' for ceasefire to be upheld

Pakistan’s foreign minister Ishaq Dar insisted on Sunday that Washington and Tehran must uphold a ceasefire agreement, after marathon talks between the two sides to end the war in the Middle East ended without an agreement.

“It is imperative that the parties continue to uphold their commitment to ceasefire,” he said.

double quotation markPakistan has been and will continue to play its role to facilitate engagement and dialogue between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the United States of America in the days to come.

Pope Leo XIV himself stepped into the international political arena yesterday, the Guardian’s Edward Helmore reported, saying “enough of war” and decrying the “delusion of omnipotence” that drives leaders into global conflict, at evening prayers in St Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City.

Cardinal Robert McElroy, the archbishop of Washington and a close ally of Pope Leo XIV, has called for Catholics to take civic action against the “immoral” war on Iran.

Reporter Christopher Hale, whose Substack chronicles the Trump administration’s interactions with the papacy, shared a video of the archbishops’s address, in which McElroy called for his congregation to “move beyond prayer”.

double quotation markAs citizens and believers in this democracy that we cherish so deeply, we must advocate for peace with our representatives and leaders.

It is not enough to say we have prayed. We must also act. For it is very possible that the negotiations will fail because of recalcitrance on both sides, and the president will move to re-enter this immoral war.

At that critical juncture, as disciples of Jesus Christ called to be peacemakers in the world, we must answer vocally and in unison: ‘No. Not in our name. Not at this moment. Not with our country.’

What makes this especially interesting, a colleague of mine points out, is that JD Vance, who less than two hours ago led the US exit from peace talks with Iran, converted to Catholicism in 2019.

He recently announced a new memoir on the subject, which you can read more about here:

Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency is citing an “informed source” saying Iran is in no hurry to negotiate, Reuters reports – and that as long as the US does not agree to a “reasonable deal”, there will be no change in situation in the strait of Hormuz.

As William Christou reported earlier, the opening of the strait of Hormuz – a chokepoint for a fifth of the world’s oil supply – is a primary demand of the US to end the war in Iran.

Opening summary

Hello, and welcome to our live coverage of events in the Middle East, as US-Iran peace talks in Islamabad seemingly broke down on Sunday.

After a marathon 21-hour first day of talks, US vice-president JD Vance announced on Sunday that his negotiating team was leaving Pakistan without reaching a deal.

Vance said Iran had chosen not to accept American terms, including a commitment to not build nuclear weapons.

Meanwhile, Iranian state media said the talks had failed due to the US’s “unreasonable demands”.

If you are just joining us, here is a quick recap of the latest updates from the past few hours:

  • High-stakes negotiations between the US and Iran appeared to break down on Sunday, despite the historic and face-to-face meetings marking the highest-level direct engagement between Washington and Tehran in decades. The talks in Pakistan were aimed at securing a peace agreement to end the weeks-long war. The core US delegation was led by Vance, who has now left Pakistan.

  • The Iranian foreign ministry had warned earlier that the success of this weekend’s talks depended on Washington avoiding “excessive demands” and “unlawful requests”. Among issues discussed were the strategic strait of Hormuz, nuclear development, war reparations, and sanctions.

  • The strait of Hormuz remains among the main points of “serious disagreement”, Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency reported on Saturday.

  • Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Saturday that Israel remains committed to keep fighting Iran. “Israel under my leadership will continue to fight Iran’s terror regime and its proxies,” Netanyahu wrote on social media. Israel was not present at the US-Iran talks.

  • Donald Trump told reporters outside the White House that it made “no difference” to him if a deal was reached with Iran. “Regardless of what happens, we win,” Trump said. “Whether we make a deal or not, makes no difference to me.”

  • The latest Israeli attacks on Lebanon have pushed the death toll to more than 2,000 with more than 6,300 wounded, according to the health ministry. Earlier, the Iranian negotiators demanded a ceasefire in Lebanon, reparations and commitment to unblock frozen assets as part of a peace deal in a preliminary meeting with Pakistani mediators.

  • The US military says it “began setting conditions for clearing mines in the strait of Hormuz” in an update released on Saturday afternoon, saying two navy destroyers had transited the strait. A spokesperson for Iran’s joint military command later denied the claim by the US military that the navy destroyers transited the waterway.

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