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Russia and Ukraine confirm three-day ceasefire from 9 May

Donald Trump has announced a three-day ceasefire in the war between Russia and Ukraine from 9 to 11 May. The US president said on social media the ceasefire would include a suspension of all “kinetic activity” and a swap of 1,000 prisoners from each country. It was confirmed by both sides. Trump said in his post: “Hopefully, it is the beginning of the end of a very long, deadly, and hard fought War,” adding that there was constant progress in talks to end the conflict. Russia had previously announced a two-day unilateral ceasefire to mark its 9 May second world war Victory Day on Saturday. Ukraine previously said that it too had offered a truce but that this had been ignored by Moscow. Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, confirmed Trump’s announcement and the prisoner swap on Friday night, writing on Telegram: “We received Russia’s agreement to conduct a prisoner exchange in the format of 1,000 for 1,000. A ceasefire regime must also be established on May 9, 10, and 11.” Zelenskyy later wrote on X: “In recent days, there have been many appeals and signals regarding the setup for tomorrow in Moscow in connection with our Ukrainian long-range sanctions. The principle of symmetry in our actions is well known and has been clearly communicated to the Russian side. “An additional argument for Ukraine in determining our position has always been the resolution of one of the key humanitarian issues of this war – namely, the release of prisoners of war. Red Square is less important to us than the lives of Ukrainian prisoners who can be brought home.” He added: “I thank the president of the United States and his team for their productive diplomatic involvement. We expect the United States to ensure that the Russian side fulfills these agreements.” Ukraine had never before said it would abide by Moscow’s call to briefly halt strikes, lambasting Putin for wanting to pause fighting only so he could stage Saturday’s annual military parade on Red Square. Kyiv said Moscow had ignored a Ukrainian proposal to halt fighting earlier this week – a counter-offer for a short-term ceasefire. Zelenskyy had cast it as a test of whether the Kremlin was serious about providing a brief respite in the four-year war. Russia on Friday confirmed the truce and the POW swap. Kremlin foreign policy adviser Yuri Ushakov said: “I confirm the acceptability for the Russian side of the initiative just proposed by US president Donald Trump, concerning a ceasefire for a prisoner-of-war exchange between Russia and Ukraine.” Russia had threatened a massive strike on the heart of Kyiv if Ukraine disrupted the Victory Day parade, repeatedly urging foreign diplomats to leave the Ukrainian capital beforehand. Moscow and Kyiv have both accused each other of violating previous ceasefires that each has separately declared.

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Middle East crisis live: US fires on two Iranian-flagged oil tankers it claims tried to violate blockade; US to mediate Israel-Lebanon talks

As the US and Iran continue to negotiate a fragile ceasefire, and fighting continues in the strait of Hormuz, life goes on in Tehran. The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, met the Italian prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, in Rome on Friday at a moment of unusual strain between Trump and Italy, driven largely by the war with Iran. Meanwhile, in Lebanon, more than half of that country’s population now depends on humanitarian aid, according to the European Union, as Israel continues its attacks on the country despite a ceasefire in the two-month-long war with militant group Hezbollah.

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Vatican stresses need for peace as Rubio meets pope amid strained relations

The Vatican has said it raised the “need to work tirelessly in favour of peace” in talks with the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, who is in Rome on a trip widely regarded as an effort to ease tensions after Donald Trump’s repeated criticisms of Pope Leo. Amid unprecedented strain on relations between the Holy See and Washington, Rubio was received by the pope on Thursday at the Apostolic Palace, before holding a series of meetings with Vatican officials Vatican video showed the first north American pope shaking hands with his guest and addressing him formally as “Mr Secretary”, to which Rubio, a Catholic, responded: “Great to see you.” Rubio was seen giving the pope a small crystal American football. He joked that he knew Leo – originally from Chicago and known as a fan of the White Sox – ‌was more ⁠of a “baseball guy”. After his 45-minute papal audience, Rubio also met the Vatican secretary of state and de facto chief diplomat, Pietro Parolin, who on the eve of his visit had strongly defended Leo and criticised Trump’s recent attacks as “rather strange”. In a statement, the Vatican said the two sides had exchanged views on current events “with particular attention to countries marked by war, political tensions, and difficult humanitarian situations, as well as on the need to work tirelessly in favour of peace”. A US official briefed reporters that the conversations were “friendly and constructive”. A spokesperson for the US state department said Rubio met Leo “to discuss the situation in the Middle East and issues of mutual interest in the western hemisphere”. “The meeting underscored the strong relationship between the United States and the Holy See, as well as their shared commitment to promoting peace and human dignity,” he added. It was unclear to what extent the meetings would help patch up the ties between Washington DC and the Vatican. On Tuesday, Trump launched a fresh verbal attack on the pope, accusing him of supporting nuclear weapons and “endangering a lot of Catholics” with his stance against the Iran war. On Wednesday, Leo responded: “If anyone wants to criticise me for proclaiming the gospel, let them do so with the truth: the church has spoken out against all nuclear weapons for years, there is no doubt about that. I simply hope to be listened to because of the value of God’s word.” Relations between the Vatican and Washington have never been so fraught. In April, the US president lashed out at Leo over the pope’s criticism of the war in Iran, calling him “weak on crime” and “terrible on foreign policy”, and claiming he had only been elected pontiff because Trump himself occupied the White House. Trump later shared – before deleting – an AI-generated image depicting himself as a Christ-like figure. Rubio’s meeting appeared aimed at trying to smooth over Trump’s insults and repair the increasingly damaged ties between the US and the Vatican. According to several analysts, the secretary of state was expected to have defended Washington’s rationale for launching the war in Iran, while carefully avoiding a direct clash with the church’s position. Asked whether he placed greater trust in Rubio or Trump, Parolin told reporters on Tuesday: “I count on no one. I count only on our Lord Jesus Christ.” He added that Trump attacking Leo “in this way, or reproaching him for what he does, seems rather strange, to say the least”. Rubio will meet the Italian prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, on Friday as relations between Rome and Washington have also deteriorated. Lorenzo Castellani, a political historian at Luiss Guido Carli University in Rome, said Trump’s attacks on the pope, which have provoked widespread outrage in Italy where the papacy plays a crucial role in the political and cultural imagination, “has effectively forced Meloni to distance herself from the US president”, despite, earlier this year, saying she hoped Trump would one day receive the Nobel peace prize. According to some Italian newspapers, Rubio’s goal in talks with Italy will not necessarily be to mend relations, but rather to reassert Trump’s position after the US president lashed out at Meloni in April, accusing her of lacking courage for refusing to join the US campaign against Iran. According to Castellani, Meloni’s shift from being a staunch Trump ally to adopting a more critical stance towards the US president is driven by political and electoral considerations. “For the first time since the second world war, foreign policy has become a central concern for Italian public opinion,” Castellani said. “This shift had already begun with the war in Ukraine, but the current crisis represents a decisive escalation. The reason is simple: this is a conflict with direct geopolitical and economic consequences for Italy and for Europe as a whole.” He added: “For this reason, Meloni can no longer maintain a clear separation between foreign and domestic policy. In the past, she has taken positions that ran counter to segments of her own electorate. But now, recent polling suggests that across both the right and the left there is broad agreement in condemning the position of Trump. The same sentiments now cut across a vast portion of the electorate – arguably as much as 80 to 90%.” Also expected to feature prominently in the talks is the future of the roughly 13,000 US military personnel stationed across seven naval bases in Italy. Asked last week whether he would consider pulling US troops out of Italy, Trump told reporters: “Probably … Italy has not been of any help to us.”

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Americans on hantavirus cruise ship reportedly to be quarantined in US

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is reportedly sending personnel to the Canary Islands to meet the cruise ship affected by the hantavirus outbreak, with plans to accompany American passengers back to the US on a chartered flight and place them into quarantine in Nebraska. An additional CDC team is already headed to Nebraska, according to unnamed sources who spoke with CNN. The sources indicated that passengers are expected to undergo quarantine measures there to help prevent any possible spread of the virus. Nebraska is home to both the federally supported National Quarantine Unit and the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit. “Nebraska Medicine and UNMC remain in close coordination with national partners regarding the evolving situation with the hantavirus outbreak on the MV Hondius cruise ship,” Nebraska Medicine said in a statement to CNN. “We cannot discuss specific communications at this time, but, our specialized teams, including the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit and National Quarantine Unit, are staffed and ready, if needed, to safely provide care while protecting our staff and the community,” the statement added. A spokesperson for the US state department confirmed to CNN that the agency was organizing the repatriation effort alongside the CDC, the Department of Health and Human Services and the Spanish government. The spokesperson said the agency was “in direct communication with Americans on board and are prepared to provide consular assistance as soon as the ship arrives in Tenerife, Spain”. Meanwhile, the New Jersey department of health announced on Friday that it was monitoring two of the state’s residents for potential exposure to hantavirus following an international flight. The CDC alerted state health officials that the two individuals may have had contact with an infected person during an international flight. The New Jersey residents were not passengers on the ship – the individual with whom they may have had contact had recently departed the Hondius. Neither resident had any symptoms at the time of the announcement, but both were being monitored as a precaution, the New Jersey health department said. New Jersey health authorities said the risk to the general public remained very low. The state said it had no current hantavirus cases nor has any confirmed case ever been reported there. Oceanwide Expeditions, the ship’s operator, estimates that 17 Americans are onboard the vessel. The World Health Organization has been coordinating the international response to the outbreak with multiple countries. However, experts say that US leadership has largely been missing from the broader global hantavirus response since Donald Trump withdrew from the organization shortly after taking office. There are now three suspected and five confirmed cases of Andes virus, a type of hantavirus that can sometimes spread with close, intimate contact but is typically spread by rodents. Three people have died, and three have been hospitalized, including in intensive care – though those patients are showing signs of improving, officials said on Thursday.

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Frustrated by Iran, Trump at last seizes enriched uranium – but from Venezuela

Donald Trump has succeeded in removing a country’s stash of highly enriched uranium – although that country is not Iran. On Friday, the US Department of Energy announced that “thanks to President Trump’s decisive leadership” 13.5kg (about 30 pounds) of uranium had been removed from a legacy research reactor in Venezuela. The department called the joint operation, involving the UK, the US and Venezuela, “a win for America, Venezuela, and the world”. “The safe removal of all enriched uranium from Venezuela sends another signal to the world of a restored and renewed Venezuela,” Brandon Williams, the administrator of the department’s National Nuclear Security Administration, said. The International Atomic Energy Agency said the uranium had been “safely and securely transported by land and sea from South to North America” after “a complex and sensitive operation”. It was taken to a Department of Energy complex in South Carolina having been removed from a site 15km from Venezuela’s capital, Caracas. The Department of Energy claimed the operation sent “another signal to the world of a restored and renewed Venezuela”. After Trump’s controversial decision to order the capture of Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro, on 3 January the White House has rebooted relations with its longtime adversaries in Caracas. Trump has recognized Maduro’s vice-president, Delcy Rodríguez – threatening Venezuela’s interim leader with an even worse fate than Maduro if she fails to comply with US demands – and set about opening the country to US energy and mining firms. A series of top Trump officials have flown to Venezuela, including the CIA director, John Ratcliffe, and late last month a US commercial flight between the two countries landed in the South American country for the first time in more than seven years. The US embassy recently reopened. Business chiefs have celebrated the start of a new era of commercial relations between the US and Venezuela, which boasts the world’s largest proven oil reserves, but pro-democracy activists have lamented Trump’s decision to embrace Rodríguez and sideline the exiled opposition leader and Nobel laureate María Corina Machado. One of Trump’s key stated objectives after going to war with Iran in February has been forcing it to surrender about 408kg of highly enriched uranium. So far those efforts have failed.

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Reg Austin obituary

The lawyer and elections expert Reg Austin, who has died aged 91, played a key role in the transition to democracy in countries such as Cambodia, East Timor and Afghanistan through UN electoral missions in the 1990s. His most longstanding political commitment, however, was to the liberation and security of his home country of Zimbabwe. The son of white settlers in what was the self-governing British colony of Southern Rhodesia, Reg took the rare step in 1961 of joining the original African political party, Zimbabwe African Peoples Union (Zapu), founded by Joshua Nkomo. Reg became one of Zapu’s lawyers, giving advice on how to handle the British government as well as the rival liberation party, Zimbabwe African National Union (Zanu), of Robert Mugabe, which was founded two years later. Reg remained a loyal confidant of Nkomo until his death in 1999. It was while studying at Cape Town University that Reg became fully aware of the racist structures he had grown up in. Mass protests against apartheid were breaking out in South Africa and demands for decolonisation were sweeping through the African continent. When he returned to his home city of Bulawayo after graduating in 1958, he saw Rhodesia with new eyes. Training as a prosecutor, he realised that the programme for “separate development” he had witnessed in South Africa was playing out too in Rhodesian courtrooms. His first case was in a team seeking the convictions of freedom fighters, including Nkomo, a charismatic trade union leader. “Having to prosecute these admirable men opened my mind,” he said. After joining Zapu, Reg left for Britain in 1961 to do a master’s in law. While living in Camberwell, south London, with his wife, Olive, Reg made regular trips to Lusaka, in present-day Zambia, where Nkomo was based. Zapu’s armed wing, the Zimbabwe People’s Revolutionary Army (Zipra), and Mugabe’s guerrillas were taking control of many rural areas in Zimbabwe. Zapu was preparing for power, and Reg was producing policy papers. The biggest issue was land, which was overwhelmingly owned by white farmers. Apart from a few large estates, most farms were technically bankrupt at the end of each year. Reg proposed that farmers could only get an annual loan if they took an African person as a partner and provided mentoring in farming skills. In 1979, Britain persuaded the minority-rule Rhodesian government to meet the liberation movements in London to agree on a peaceful path to independence. Lord (Peter) Carrington, the British foreign secretary, had won plaudits for persuading the prime minister, Margaret Thatcher, to talk to insurgents whom she called terrorists. But Reg, who attended the talks as a member of the combined Zapu-Zanu Patriotic Front delegation, was highly critical of him. In Reg’s view, it was absurd to pretend the UK was a neutral mediator rather than a party engaged on the counter-revolutionary side, and Carrington should have handed the issue to the UN, as was done later in Cambodia and Namibia. Reg also blamed Carrington for not negotiating how to restore land seized from Africans. Instead, the foreign secretary kicked the problem down the road, insisting the new constitution ban the expropriation of land for 10 years. Reg called this an IED (improvised explosive device) placed under Zimbabwe’s future – indeed, when President Mugabe approved a campaign of violence to evict white farmers at the end of the 90s. Born in Johannesburg, Reg was the son of Reginald Austin, a miner, and Gwendolyn (nee Wassman), an accountant, who moved to Bulawayo when Reg was three months old. There he attended Milton high school before heading to Cape Town University, where he met Olive Young, an art student, also from Bulawayo. They married in 1961. In London, Reg spent 17 years at University College London, ending as a law professor. He and Olive raised three daughters in their Camberwell home, which became a haven for Zimbabweans passing through. In 1982, two years after independence, the Austins moved to Harare. Reg was appointed professor and dean to found the law faculty at the University of Zimbabwe. The first decade of independence was dominated by tension between Zapu and Zanu, partly provoked by South Africa’s efforts to destabilise the so-called frontline states, but grossly worsened by Mugabe’s support for the army’s murder of demobilised guerrillas and hundreds of civilians. It concluded with a one-sided accord for Zapu to merge with Zanu, and Mugabe to become president. Reg had many agonised discussions with Nkomo about whether to accept what looked like surrender. “The amazing thing about Reg,” said Jeremy Brickhill, another white revolutionary and Zipra officer, “was that he could sell these dreadful settlement terms to Zapu and retain their respect. He was so practical … The merger with Zanu had to be done, as unpalatable as it was, in order to stop the massacre.” In 1992 the UN asked Reg to help organise the first democratic election in Cambodia. The cold war was over and elections were seen as the way to establish peace in authoritarian systems emerging from massive internal conflict. Reg shared in the consensus, though he knew elections were insufficient. In 1993, he joined the Commonwealth Secretariat in London as director of legal and constitutional affairs. After five years he took up a post at the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, a Stockholm thinktank. When that assignment was over in 2003, Reg went to Kabul as the UN’s elections chief. He had the risky job of preparing Afghanistan’s first competitive elections at a time when the Taliban were attacking voter registration teams. In 2010, the Zimbabwean government of national unity offered Reg a role as head of the country’s first human rights commission. It was typical of his energy and courage that he accepted. But in 2013 he resigned, citing the government’s failure to allocate funding for an office and staff, or to pass legislation to enshrine the commission’s independence. To make these complaints public also required courage. He is survived by Olive, their daughters, Josephine, Beatrice and Laura, and a granddaughter, Abigail. • Reginald Henry Fulbrooke Austin, lawyer, elections expert and activist, born 18 April 1935; died 23 April 2026

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Evacuation of hantavirus-stricken cruise ship could face delays due to bad weather

The evacuation of the hantavirus-stricken MV Hondius cruise ship must be completed within 24 hours of the vessel reaching Tenerife on Sunday or face days or even weeks of delay because of bad weather, authorities in the Canary Islands warned on Friday. The Dutch-flagged vessel, which was sailing from Argentina to Cape Verde, is due to arrive in the Spanish archipelago this weekend, triggering what Spain’s health minister has termed an “unprecedented operation” to receive, assess and repatriate the 149 passengers and crew members onboard. But the operation now faces the additional complication of changing weather. “The only window of opportunity we have to carry out this operation is around 12 o’clock on Sunday morning and until conditions change from Monday,” Alfonso Cabello, a regional government spokesperson, told reporters on Friday. “Otherwise, the ship must leave and no operation could be carried out again in theory … until the end of May,” he said, citing wind and swell. The MV Hondius is estimated to arrive at the port of Granadilla, Tenerife, in the early hours of Sunday. After negotiations between the Spanish government and the archipelago’s regional authorities, it will not dock but will instead remain at anchor in the south-eastern port of Granadilla. Passengers will be evaluated on the ship and will not have any contact with the local population when they are taken from the ship to be repatriated or, in the case of the 14 Spanish nationals onboard, transported to a military hospital in Madrid for compulsory quarantine. “This is an unprecedented operation in response to an international health alert involving 23 countries,” the Spanish health minister, Mónica García, told Spain’s state radio broadcaster, RNE, on Friday morning. “We’re coordinating this from Spain and the World Health Organization has entrusted Spain with this operation – which, as I’ve said, is unprecedented. We’re going to do what we have to do, which is work and deliver the necessary health and logistical management.” García confirmed that non-Spanish citizens who did not need urgent medical attention would be evacuated to their home countries even if they showed symptoms of hantavirus. “The international protocols will be followed – as will all the strict measures when it comes to health prevention,” she said. “The protocol is based on no one needing urgent medical attention. And we think that won’t be the case because everyone was asymptomatic when they left Cape Verde and they’ve been on the boat for many days now, which makes us think that the risk that they’ve been infected is diminishing each day.” Three people – a Dutch couple and a German national – have died in the outbreak on the ship. Four others confirmed to be infected – two Britons, a Dutch and a Swiss national – are being treated in hospitals in the Netherlands, South Africa and Switzerland. On Friday, the British and Spanish authorities said they were investigating two possible new cases. One involves a British national on the South Atlantic island of Tristan da Cunha, where the cruise ship made a stop on 15 April. The other involves a woman who was on the same flight as a Dutch patient who died in Johannesburg after travelling on the MV Hondius and contracting the virus. She is being treated in a hospital in the eastern Spanish region of Alicante. The WHO said on Friday that the risk the hantavirus strain in question posed to the public was minimal, as it spread only through “very close contact” and was “not spreading anything close” to how Covid had spread. “This is a dangerous virus, but only to the person who’s really infected, and the risk to the general population remains absolutely low,” the WHO spokesperson Christian Lindmeier told a press briefing in Geneva. He said that even the people who had stayed in the same cabin as an infected person on the MV Hondius “don’t seem to be both infected in some cases”. Based on previous outbreaks in Argentina, it is thought the Andes strain of the virus can be spread between people through very close contact. Exactly how easily it is transmitted is unclear, with experts studying the virus and its transmission carefully given the relatively limited scientific data currently available. Despite these uncertainties, the WHO has stressed the hantavirus outbreak is not the start of a pandemic, and that the public health threat is low. The Guardian understands experts think transmission primarily occurs when patients have symptoms. However, out of an abundance of caution, public health teams involved in contact tracing are also considering the two days before symptoms develop. The UK and the US are among the countries that have agreed to send planes to Tenerife to repatriate their citizens. Health authorities across four continents are scrambling to track down and monitor passengers who left the ship before the outbreak was detected. They are also trying to trace others who may have come into contact with them since then. On 24 April, nearly two weeks after the first passenger had died onboard, more than two dozen people from at least 12 different countries left the ship without contact tracing, the ship’s operator and Dutch officials said on Thursday. According to the WHO, health authorities did not confirm hantavirus in a passenger on the MV Hondius until 2 May. The looming arrival of the ship has prompted considerable unease in the Canaries. Fernando Clavijo, the regional president, had objected to the ship coming into port at Granadilla and convinced the central government that it should instead remain at anchor. In an interview with the Spanish newspaper ABC on Friday, he said Spain had been under “no legal obligation” to take in the ship and that it should have put into port in Cape Verde, which refused it permission to dock. Speaking later the same day, Clavijo said a plan had been devised to minimise the time and contacts that the passengers being evacuated would have while on Tenerife, adding: “We know with certainty that no one will get off the ship if their plane is not already waiting on the runway.” The authorities’ insistence that everything possible was being done to protect people on Tenerife and across the wider archipelago appeared to have reassured locals. Visitors, too, appeared unfazed as they lay on sunloungers, soaking up the sunshine and the 23C heat. “It’s no problem,” said one local woman, who was selling tourist trinkets by the beach near Los Cristianos, in the south of the island. “The Canarian government has confirmed that the ship will not dock in the port but on the high seas.” The woman, who did not want to give her name, said her only concern was of the possible effects on Tenerife’s lucrative tourism industry. “People get scared quickly,” she added. Ima, who runs a shop selling traditional handmade goods, was similarly relaxed: “The news says it’s no problem.” But the view was not shared by everyone. Joao Decastro, who runs La Siesta Excursions, said he felt Spain was always the country that came to the rescue in international emergencies. He was worried about the possible cost to local people. “To be honest, I’m not very happy about what they’re doing because I think [the cruise ship passengers] have many places to go, right?” he said. “This is a very touristy area and right now that would make the tourists more afraid.” He added: “If there are three dead on a boat, imagine a population that reaches a million people here.” Additional reporting by Nicola Davis

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US awaiting response from Iran over proposals for ceasefire deal, says Rubio

The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, has said that Washington is expecting a response from Iran on Friday to its proposals for an interim deal to end the conflict in the Middle East, as Iran accused the US of breaching the increasingly fragile ceasefire announced last month. In recent days there have been the biggest flare-ups in fighting in and around the contested strait of Hormuz since the informal truce began. The rise in violence followed Donald Trump’s announcement – then rapid pause – of a new naval mission aimed at opening the strategic waterway. On Friday US forces fired on and disabled two Iranian-flagged tankers that attempted to violate the American blockade of Iran’s ports, the US military said. Despite the clashes diplomatic efforts continue, with the mediators Pakistan passing to Iran a brief memorandum that the US has said could act as a basis for a more solid ceasefire allowing new talks. Speaking to reporters at the White House on Friday evening, Trump said he expected a response from Iran soon. “I’m getting a letter supposedly tonight,” he said. Asked whether Iran was intentionally slow-rolling the negotiation process, he replied: “We’ll find out soon enough.” During a visit to Rome, Rubio said: “We’re expecting a response from them today at some point … I hope it’s a serious offer, I really do … The hope is it’s something that can put us into a serious process of negotiation.” There have been wild swings from hope to despair in recent days, as the US and Iran test each other’s resilience and will, seeking leverage in any talks through belligerent rhetoric, defiance and sporadic violence. Abbas Araghchi, Iran’s foreign minister, accused the US of breaking the ceasefire, posting on X on Friday: “Every time a diplomatic solution is on the table, the U.S. opts for a reckless military adventure.” Araghchi also boasted that Iran’s ballistic missile stocks and launcher capacity had not only been repaired and restocked during the pause in hostilities, but expanded. Control of the strait and the threat to restart attacks on nearby countries’ oil and other infrastructure in the Gulf are the two main cards Iran can play in negotiations. The US has blockaded Iran, stopping all Iran-linked shipping trying to leave the Gulf, to put pressure on Tehran. The elimination of Iran’s missile armoury and production facilities were repeatedly stated as a key objective by US officials early in the war. Their restriction is also likely be a demand during any negotiations. An Iranian official said on Friday that US attacks overnight in and near the strait of Hormuz struck an Iranian cargo vessel, wounding 10 sailors, with five others missing. It was not immediately clear whether the vessel was directly targeted. US Central Command said Iranian forces had launched missiles, drones and small boats at three US warships overnight but that none were hit, while US forces destroyed the incoming threat and retaliated against land bases in Iran. Meanwhile, the United Arab Emirates said it had responded to another Iranian missile barrage on Friday. The UAE’s defence ministry said three people were wounded after air defences engaged two ballistic missiles and three drones launched by Iran. It was not clear if all were successfully intercepted. The authorities told people to stay away from any fallen debris. Iran has launched hundreds of missiles and drones at the UAE during the war, frequently hitting civilian infrastructure, including oil facilities and luxury hotels. Trump said on Thursday that the ceasefire was holding, but hopes earlier this week that an “interim” deal between Tehran and Washington might be agreed before the US president travelled to China next week now look premature. Earlier on Friday, the US treasury announced sanctions against individuals and companies it accused of helping the Iranian war effort, including in China and Hong Kong. The fresh sanctions come just days before Trump is set to arrive in Beijing. The US president minimised the clashes, dismissing strikes on Thursday as “just a love tap” – but has repeated threats to launch a major new offensive against Iran unless there was agreement soon. The US proposal is believed to offer a formal ceasefire for at least 60 days that would lead to talks to resolve contentious issues such as Iran’s nuclear programme. “They have to understand: if it doesn’t get signed, they’re going to have a lot of pain,” Trump told reporters in Washington. Despite many observers’ scepticism, the possibility of even a partial agreement that could lead to the reopening of the strait of Hormuz sent global stocks to near-record highs on Thursday as oil prices dropped steeply. On Friday, the price of a barrel of Brent crude headed upwards once more. In normal times the strait carries a fifth of the world’s supplies of oil and fossil gas. Its closure in the first days of the war has already forced a steep rise in fuel prices around the world and threatens a global recession. Pakistani officials have expressed optimism in recent days about a potential deal. Islamabad hosted a round of abortive face-to-face talks last month. On Monday, the US military said it had destroyed six Iranian small boats, as well as cruise missiles and drones, after Trump sent warships to guide stranded tankers through the waterway. Two ships of the many hundred that are stranded are believed to have crossed through the strait under the protection of the US navy, but the effort – called “Project Freedom” – was shelved after about 48 hours, possibly as a result of complaints from Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Trump claimed he had paused it to allow negotiations a better chance of success. In Washington on Friday, Qatar’s prime minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani, met with JD Vance to discuss the Pakistani-led mediation efforts to bring the conflict to an end. During the meeting, al-Thani “stressed the need for all parties to engage with the ongoing mediation efforts, to pave the way for addressing the root causes of the crisis through peaceful means and dialogue, leading to a comprehensive agreement that achieves lasting peace in the region”, the Qatari foreign ministry said on X. Analysts say Iranian leaders are divided over whether to engage in new talks with the US or hold out, despite the massive and continuing economic losses caused by the war and the US blockade. Senior Iranian officials have publicly rejected concessions in recent days. Some appear to favour dragging out the negotiations closer to the November midterm elections in the US, when the Trump administration will be under intense pressure to settle the war and Iran may get a better deal. However, regional diplomats believe Iran could overplay its hand, with there being an opportunity to finish the war and claim a victory at the present – something that could be harder if all-out fighting resumes. If there was no agreement, Washington could also unilaterally end the war and walk away, leaving Iran under suffocating economic sanctions, they said. Any agreement between the US and Iran could also help lower tensions in Lebanon, where a separate truce was threatened by an Israeli strike on southern Beirut that killed a commander from Hezbollah, the Iran-backed Islamist militant movement, on Wednesday. The US announced on Friday that it would mediate two days of “intensive talks” between Israel and Lebanon next week. A new Israeli strike on Friday killed four people, including two women, in the southern Lebanon town of Toura, the health ministry said. Air raid sirens sounded in several cities in northern Israel after shelling from Lebanon, according to the Israeli military.