Mediators Trying to Pull U.S. and Iran Back From Brink, Officials Say
Qatari mediators were in Iran seeking to salvage the tattered truce. President Trump said talks with Tehran would continue, even if the cease-fire was “over.”
Regional mediators were rushing on Friday to pull the United States and Iran back from the brink of renewed war, as days of strikes by the two countries appeared to settle into an uneasy pause.
Qatar, which helped broker the U.S.-Iran truce last month, has been in talks with Washington and Tehran to de-escalate the crisis, according to three officials with knowledge of the matter, who requested anonymity to discuss sensitive diplomacy. Two of them said on Friday that a Qatari delegation was in Iran as part of those efforts.
In recent days, several countries in the region — including Bahrain, Kuwait and Jordan, all of which host U.S. military facilities — said they had come under Iranian attack.
President Trump said on Friday that Iran had asked the United States to continue talks and that Washington had agreed. And yet, writing on social media, he said that the United States had also told Tehran “in no uncertain terms” that the cease-fire was “OVER,” echoing remarks he made earlier this week and raising the prospect that negotiations could continue even as fighting persists.
There was no immediate response by Iranian officials. The recent strikes have all but shattered the truce and followed a now familiar pattern of hostilities: attacks blamed on Iran against commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz, followed by American retaliation, Iranian counterattacks and then a return to fragile stalemate.
Even as the fighting appeared to subside on Friday, it remained unclear whether the latest mediation efforts could prevent that cycle from repeating. It has become a dangerous test of wills, with each side trying to show that it can absorb the other’s attacks and respond forcefully, without tipping the conflict back into full-scale war.
Tehran has threatened in recent days to expand its attacks to other U.S. military facilities in the region if American attacks continue. Iran accused U.S. forces of striking railway lines this week in the country’s north, and Mohammad Bagher Zolghadr, secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, warned on Friday that “attacks on infrastructure will be met with reciprocal action.”
There were scattered reports overnight from Iranian state media of explosions in southern Iran, but the reports were at times contradictory and often followed by denials. U.S. Central Command, which oversees American military operations in the Middle East, had made no announcement of new strikes by Friday morning.
The confusion reflected how much of the region remained on edge, with even fragmentary reports of explosions enough to raise fears that the latest cycle of strikes could widen again.
At the center of the crisis is the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important energy corridors. The United States has accused Iran of targeting commercial vessels in the waterway, while Tehran has insisted that marine traffic adhere to a designated route through Iran’s territorial waters. The dispute has turned partly on the wording of the truce, which called on Iran to help arrange safe commercial passage through the strait, while leaving unclear exactly how.
The U.S. military said on Thursday that it had struck more than 170 targets in Iran during the previous 48 hours, a significant increase compared with earlier flare-ups during the cease-fire. The strikes were focused on military targets on the Iranian coast and were intended to degrade Iran’s ability to threaten commercial shipping in the strait, the military said.
The two days of attacks — which came during funeral ceremonies for Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader killed in U.S.-Israeli strikes on Feb. 28 — killed 14 people and injured 78 others, according to Iran’s health ministry, which did not give details about the victims.
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Leily Nikounazar contributed reporting.
Adam Rasgon is a reporter for The Times in Jerusalem, covering Israeli and Palestinian affairs.
Euan Ward is a Times reporter covering Lebanon and Syria. He is based in Beirut.
