166 resultsfor “US talks ceasefire Israel Lebanon”
talks appeared to be going ahead. - **Oil prices fell on Tuesday while most stocks rose on lingering hopes for a deal to end the US-Iran war and reopen the strait of Hormuz**, despite Tehran
talks on Iran’s nuclear activities. The Reuters news agency, citing an official briefed on the meeting, said Trump wants the nuclear issue addressed at the start of any negotiations. CNN, citing two sources familiar
talks. Pakistan for its part is trying to put together a string of confidence-building measures, which started with Trump applying pressure on the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, to agree to a ceasefire
talks are continuing shows both the US and Iran are interested in a deal. On Wednesday, Iran's parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf warned that it was "not possible" for the Strait of Hormuz
ceasefire](https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/apr/21/trump-resume-bombing-iran-ceasefire) at the request of mediator Pakistan until Tehran responded to the US’s negotiating positions or until talks were concluded “one way or the other”. - **The Pentagon announced that the US
talks, fighting has continued between Hezbollah and Israel in Lebanon, where more than 2,100 people have been killed by Israeli strikes, according to Lebanese health officials. Hezbollah has also fired into Israel, killing
ceasefire earlier this week. Officials on Islamabad said a very basic “interim” deal could be reached as early as this weekend and that Tehran was reviewing a US proposal. However, Trump and Pakistan have consistently
talks with the US, said it was “impossible for others to pass” the strategic strait without Iran’s consent. He called Washington’s blockade “ignorant” and “foolish”, saying Tehran would not allow others to transit
ceasefire on the coordinated route as already announced by Ports and Maritime Organisation of the Islamic Rep of Iran," he wrote on X. Iranian state TV later quoted a "senior military official" as saying that
talks between the US and Iran have faltered. Tehran wants a permanent end to the war, while Trump has insisted that Iran must first reopen the Strait of Hormuz, through which one-fifth of global
ceasefire in the war](https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/may/01/trump-iran-war-hostilities-letter) – launched by the United States and Israel in late February – has been in effect since 8 April, with one failed round of peace talks having taken place
Israel started on February 28. On Wednesday, Iran’s parliament speaker and former IRGC and police commander Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, who led the Iranian delegation at the weekend talks in Pakistan, held a rare phone
ceasefire. Here is what we know as the conflict enters day 66: ## In Iran - Responding to Trump’s new naval operation, Iran’s military said on Monday: “Any foreign armed force, especially the aggressive US
US military says it's not seeking escalation The UAE's Defense Ministry advised residents not to approach, photograph or touch "any debris or fragments that have fallen as a result of successful air interceptions
Lebanon. The statement then “encouraged” Israel to meet the EU’s conditions on human rights under the EU-Israel Association Agreement. On March 30, just before the final vote on the bill, European countries, including
Israel, Qatar, Kuwait and the UAE. A preexisting transatlantic rift has been significantly worsened by the refusal of Washington’s Nato allies to get involved in the war with Iran after the initial US-Israeli
talks were progressing with Pakistan’s mediation and warned the US and the UAE against being drawn into a “quagmire by ill-wishers”. - **Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said on Monday that no commercial vessels
talks in Geneva on 27 February but walked away without a deal. The next day, Israel and the United States started the war. The price of Brent crude oil, the international standard, is still nearly
Israel-Lebanon ceasefire is linked to broader U.S. efforts to draw its war with Iran to a close. Tehran has insisted that the fighting in Lebanon remain paused as a precondition for further peace talks
ceasefire. The US legislators’ letter to Cooper raised a series of questions about US involvement in the Israeli displacement campaign. “Have forces under your command provided refuelling services, intelligence, or other assistance for Israeli imposition