A senior American official told Barak Ravid that the United States and Iran have agreed to cease reciprocal strikes in the Strait of Hormuz and will hold a meeting in Doha on Tuesday. The report is from a single source, according to Israel Hayom, and remains unconfirmed by either government.
A senior American official told journalist Barak Ravid that the United States and Iran have agreed to cease reciprocal strikes in the Strait of Hormuz and to hold a meeting in Doha on Tuesday. The report, published by Israel Hayom, is based on a single source and has not been independently confirmed by either government.
If confirmed, the agreement would mark a significant step toward de-escalation in the strategic waterway, which has been the scene of tit-for-tat attacks between the two countries in recent weeks. The scheduled meeting in Doha follows weeks of indirect talks and shuttle diplomacy by Qatari and Pakistani mediators. As The Zioneer reported earlier, President Trump had said the US and Iran were close to a 60-day ceasefire framework and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. A separate round of talks in June had established direct communications lines between the parties.
The upcoming Doha meeting has not been officially announced by either Washington or Tehran. Details on the agenda remain unconfirmed.
2 developments
- StrongTrump: US and Iran close to 60-day ceasefire deal, Strait of Hormuz to reopen
- ConfirmedU.S. and Iran reportedly near agreement on nuclear freeze, sanctions relief, and Strait of Hormuz reopening
- StrongSenior US official confirms strikes on Iran have ended
- StrongUS and Iran agree to set up direct communications to keep Hormuz open and sustain Lebanon ceasefire
Source and signal
- Internal intake
