Live Thursday, 18 June 2026
BREAKING
Egyptian FM holds calls with Iranian counterpart , U.S. Envoy on regional developmentsZverev into French Open last-fourIsraeli fire kills four people in Gaza, medics sayAncelotti eases Neymar W. Cup fearsArab, Islamic states condemn Israeli actions at Al-AqsaSyria Hopes for Terrorism Delisting to Spur Economic RecoveryBenfica linked with Fulham’s SilvaVan der Breggen takes Giro leadKremlin: Saudi Arabia Named Guest of Honor at St. Petersburg Economic Forumرياضة محلية‘Really cool to share this journey with her’: Michelle Wie West playing for her family at U.S. Women’s OpenArchaeological Replicas Showcase Saudi Arabia’s Rich History at Kuala Lumpur Int’l Book FairRenewable Energy Helps Red Sea Global Avoid 118,000 Tons of Carbon EmissionsLetter: Carol Rumens obituaryEngland v India: third and deciding women’s T20 cricket international – liveHealthVolunteers serve comfort food in a worrying Ebola outbreak – Sault Michigan NewsEconomyTrump signs AI executive order asking companies to give government early access to modelsVarietySouth West Water fined nearly £2million after supplying homes with parasite-ridden water that left four people in hospital – and telling people it was safe to drinkScience & TechYour car is following you – how to reclaim your data privacy on the open roadWorldHigh school valedictorian yanked from stage after hijacking speech to rant against Israel and ICESaudi FM Receives Written Message from Russian CounterpartEgyptian FM holds calls with Iranian counterpart , U.S. Envoy on regional developmentsZverev into French Open last-fourIsraeli fire kills four people in Gaza, medics sayAncelotti eases Neymar W. Cup fearsArab, Islamic states condemn Israeli actions at Al-AqsaSyria Hopes for Terrorism Delisting to Spur Economic RecoveryBenfica linked with Fulham’s SilvaVan der Breggen takes Giro leadKremlin: Saudi Arabia Named Guest of Honor at St. Petersburg Economic Forumرياضة محلية‘Really cool to share this journey with her’: Michelle Wie West playing for her family at U.S. Women’s OpenArchaeological Replicas Showcase Saudi Arabia’s Rich History at Kuala Lumpur Int’l Book FairRenewable Energy Helps Red Sea Global Avoid 118,000 Tons of Carbon EmissionsLetter: Carol Rumens obituaryEngland v India: third and deciding women’s T20 cricket international – liveHealthVolunteers serve comfort food in a worrying Ebola outbreak – Sault Michigan NewsEconomyTrump signs AI executive order asking companies to give government early access to modelsVarietySouth West Water fined nearly £2million after supplying homes with parasite-ridden water that left four people in hospital – and telling people it was safe to drinkScience & TechYour car is following you – how to reclaim your data privacy on the open roadWorldHigh school valedictorian yanked from stage after hijacking speech to rant against Israel and ICESaudi FM Receives Written Message from Russian Counterpart
Prices
US dollar49.93EGPEuro57.68EGPBritish pound66.74EGPSaudi riyal13.31EGPUAE dirham13.60EGPKuwaiti dinar162.35EGPJordanian dinar70.42EGPQatari riyal13.72EGPTurkish lira1.08EGPChinese yuan7.37EGPGold 246,852.16EGP/gGold 215,995.64EGP/gGold 185,139.12EGP/gSilver110.14EGP/g
US dollar49.93EGPEuro57.68EGPBritish pound66.74EGPSaudi riyal13.31EGPUAE dirham13.60EGPKuwaiti dinar162.35EGPJordanian dinar70.42EGPQatari riyal13.72EGPTurkish lira1.08EGPChinese yuan7.37EGPGold 246,852.16EGP/gGold 215,995.64EGP/gGold 185,139.12EGP/gSilver110.14EGP/g
NEWS BREAKING
Middle East

Iran envoys tackle potential peace deal with Qatar prime minister, official says

DUBAI/NEW DELHI – Iran’s top negotiator and foreign minister were in Doha on Monday, May 25, for talks with Qatar’s prime minister on a potential US deal to end the three-month-old war, an official said, even as Washington and Tehran downplayed hopes of an imminent breakthrough.

Even as the talks proceeded, US forces on Monday conducted strikes in southern Iran against targets including boats attempting to lay mines and missile launch sites, in what it described as defensive actions.

The US Central Command said in a statement the strikes were designed “to protect our troops from threats posed by Iranian forces.”

“U.S. Central Command continues to defend our forces while using restraint during the ongoing ceasefire,” said Navy Captain Tim Hawkins, a Central Command spokesperson.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters in New Delhi earlier that the US would give diplomacy every chance to succeed before considering whether to deal with Iran in “another way.”

There was a “pretty solid thing on the table in terms of their ability to open up the strait (of Hormuz), get the strait open, enter into a very real, significant, time-limited negotiation on the nuclear matter, and hopefully we can pull it off,” Rubio said.

In a lengthy post on Truth Social on Monday, US President Donald Trump said talks with Iran were going “nicely,” but warned of fresh attacks if they failed. It “will only be a great deal for all, or no deal at all,” he wrote.

The official briefed on the Iranians’ Doha visit told Reuters the discussions focused primarily on the Strait of Hormuz and Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium while Iran’s central bank governor attended to discuss the potential release of frozen Iranian funds as part of a final deal.

Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said earlier that nuclear issues would only be negotiated on if the framework accord is agreed first.

Trump has said his key aim in the war is to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon with its highly enriched uranium. Tehran has consistently denied it has plans to do that.

The two sides remain at odds on several other issues, such as Israel’s war in Lebanon with the Iranian-backed Hezbollah militia and Tehran’s demands for the lifting of sanctions and the release of tens of billions of dollars of Iranian oil revenues frozen in foreign banks.

As efforts to reach a deal continued on Monday, Iran said it had downed a “hostile” stealth drone using a new air defense system, Iranian news agencies reported, without saying where it had come from.

“This is a sign from us that no more stealth drones can penetrate the skies of the Persian Gulf,” Fars quoted unnamed officials as saying.

Potentially complicating the Lebanon track in later talks, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday Israel would intensify strikes against Hezbollah in Lebanon. Israel’s military soon thereafter said it was attacking Hezbollah infrastructure in Lebanon’s eastern Bekaa Valley and several other areas.

Israel and Lebanon agreed to a ceasefire in mid-April, but Israel has continued airstrikes it says are acts of self-defense against Hezbollah, which was not party to the truce.

Trump pushes Abraham accords

In his Truth Social post, Trump also called on more Arab and Muslim states to sign up to the Abraham Accords, brokered during his first term in office and aimed at normalizing ties between those states and Israel. He said Saudi Arabia and Qatar should immediately sign and Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan and Turkey should follow suit, calling his request mandatory.

Netanyahu’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A Pakistani source familiar with the matter said that the statement reflected an attempt to use the Iran diplomacy for a wider push around the accords — but that the two issues were “not interlinked and cannot be made so.”

Others saw the suggestion as aimed at making an Iran deal more palatable to skeptics.

“Trump is trying to sell an Iran deal as an Abraham Accords sequel: good for Israel, good for the region, tough enough for Washington,” said Ali Vaez, Iran project director at the International Crisis Group.

“But he is trading one fantasy for another — from forcing Iran to surrender to pretending a fragile deal can anchor a new Middle East order.”

Iran deal sticking points

Baghaei said the potential Iran deal contained no specific details on management of the Strait of Hormuz, through which about a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied gas usually flows.

Iran will not charge tolls for ships to pass through, but there will be a cost for services offered such as navigation and steps to protect the environment, he said, under a protocol to be agreed with Oman, which lies on the opposite shore of the waterway.

Citing a Middle East diplomatic source, Japan’s Nikkei newspaper reported the US and Iran were discussing a plan to open the strait about 30 days after reaching a deal to end hostilities.

Iran would then clear mines from the strait during a 30-day window, after which ships from all countries could navigate freely and safely, Nikkei reported.

Since the US and Israel launched strikes on Iran on February 28, only a few dozen vessels have been passing through the Strait of Hormuz compared with 125 to 140 daily previously.

Iran’s state TV said on Monday that 32 vessels and five oil tankers passed through the strait in the past 24 hours with the authorization of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards naval forces.

The standoff has caused a spike in oil prices and driven up the costs of fuel, fertilizer and food. On Monday, oil prices fell more than 4% to two-week lows amid optimism that a deal might come soon. – Rappler.com

المصدر: Rappler (PH)

0 Views

أضف تعليقاً

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *