Iran Tightens Grip on Hormuz, Accuses Trump of Bad Faith as Naval Blockade Escalates

Iran has issued a stark warning to global energy markets, tightening its strategic control over the Strait of Hormuz and accusing the United States of negotiating in bad faith, a move analysts warn could trigger a 10% correction in risk assets. Tehran has formally refused to attend a new round of U.S.-brokered peace talks, with the state news agency IRNA blaming Washington's 'excessive demands' and the crippling naval blockade for shattering the ceasefire. The Iranian government stated the outlook for constructive dialogue remains 'bleak' and demanded the immediate lifting of the port blockade before any return to negotiations, escalating geopolitical tensions in a key global oil chokepoint.
Iran backs out of talks as the U.S. seizes TOUSKA in the Gulf of Oman
The freeze in diplomacy came as Trump described a clash at sea. In a Truth Social post, he said an Iranian-flagged cargo ship called the TOUSKA tried to pass the American naval blockade in the Gulf of Oman.
Trump said the ship was nearly 900 feet long and weighed almost as much as an aircraft carrier. He said the guided missile destroyer USS Spruance intercepted it and warned it to stop. According to Trump, the crew refused, the Navy fired into the engine room, and U.S. Marines then took custody of the vessel.
Trump said the USS Spruance gave the ship fair warning, then blasted a hole in the engine room after the crew did not listen.
He also said the TOUSKA is under U.S. Treasury sanctions because of what he called a prior history of illegal activity, and that the United States now has full custody of the vessel and is inspecting what is on board.
That seizure came as Iran stepped away from the second round of talks. Tehran said the blockade of ships entering and leaving Iranian ports was one reason it would not attend.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian also pushed back on Trump’s nuclear line, saying Trump has “no justification to deprive Iran of its nuclear rights.” That came only 48 hours after Trump said Iran had agreed to give up uranium enrichment and all “nuclear dust.”
Tehran rejected that too, saying that Trump’s “maximalism and unreasonable and unrealistic demands” caused the collapse in talks. Iranian officials also said they believed they were “facing deception” before a possible “surprise attack” from the United States, making clear that Tehran does not think Washington is negotiating in good faith.
Oil rises and U.S. gas stays high as war pressure hits energy markets
Meanwhile, West Texas Intermediate futures for May delivery surged by about 6% to $88.93 a barrel by press time. Brent crude for June delivery gained nearly 5.63% to $95.48.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright had said on Sunday that U.S. gas prices may not fall below $3 a gallon until next year as the war with Iran and the closure of the strait keep hitting energy markets. On CNN’s State of the Union, Chris said:
“I don’t know, that could happen later this year, that might not happen until next year, but prices have likely peaked. Certainly with a resolution of this conflict, energy prices will go down. Under $3 a gallon is pretty tremendous in inflation-adjusted terms. We had that in the Trump administration, but we hadn’t seen that in inflation-adjusted terms for quite a long time. We’ll get back there for sure.”
Regular unleaded in the United States averaged $2.90 a gallon on Feb. 1, according to GasBuddy. Since the war began on Feb. 28, the average has climbed to about $4.04 a gallon, according to AAA.
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