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Two India-bound fuel vessels transit Hormuz - Bloomberg

May 14, 2026, 07:40 GMT+1

Two India-bound vessels carrying cooking fuel from the Persian Gulf appeared to have transited the Strait of Hormuz, Bloomberg reported on Thursday.

One liquefied petroleum gas carrier, Symi, emerged in the Gulf of Oman after turning off its transponder, while another, NV Sunshine, went dark shortly after passing through the strait, the report said.

The passages brought to nine the number of large vessels carrying oil, fuel and gas that have crossed Hormuz since Sunday, an increase from recent weeks as negotiations to end the war remain deadlocked, according to the report.

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Iran urges BRICS to condemn US, Israeli strikes

May 14, 2026, 07:19 GMT+1

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi urged BRICS members on Thursday to explicitly condemn what he called US and Israeli violations of international law, including attacks on Iran.

“Iran calls on BRICS member states and all responsible members of the international community to explicitly condemn violations of international law by the United States and Israel, including their illegal aggression against Iran,” Araghchi told a BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting in New Delhi.

Iran ‘frighteningly close’ to nuclear weapons, US energy secretary says

May 14, 2026, 05:18 GMT+1

US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said on Wednesday that Iran was “frighteningly close” to constructing nuclear weapons, telling lawmakers Tehran was weeks away from enriching one ton of uranium to weapons-grade levels.

“They are weeks, a small number of weeks away to enrich that to weapons-grade uranium,” Wright told the Senate Armed Services Committee. “There’s still a weaponization process that happens after that, but they’re quite close to constructing nuclear weapons.”

Wright said Iran also had uranium enriched up to 60%, as well as “a lot of” 20% enriched uranium, which he called “very concerning.”

Asked whether US President Donald Trump would need to target all of Iran’s uranium stockpiles to stop enrichment, Wright said, “I think that’s the wise strategy.”

“Ultimately, the goal is to prevent future enrichment of uranium as well. Yes, to have a safe world, we need to end their nuclear program,” he added.

Iran likely behind attack on cargo ship near Strait , South Korea official says

May 14, 2026, 03:47 GMT+1

A senior South Korean official said it is “unlikely” that any actor other than Iran was responsible for an attack on the cargo ship Namu near the Strait of Hormuz, according to Yonhap News Agency.

"Seoul will take diplomatic action once the entity responsible for the attack on the cargo ship is confirmed," the official added.

The vessel was previously reported to have been damaged in an explosion and fire near the strategic waterway, prompting investigations by South Korean authorities into the cause of the incident.

Iran analysts pessimistic on US talks despite China’s role

May 14, 2026, 03:35 GMT+1
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Behrouz Turani

Iranian former diplomats and political analysts struck a pessimistic tone in Wednesday’s media ahead of Donald Trump’s talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping, warning of renewed escalation and portraying China as central to any Iran-US settlement.

Most outlets framed negotiations as deadlocked. Reform-leaning Fararu warned of “the increasing possibility of yet another escalation.”

In an article titled “Negotiating About Negotiating” published by Sharq, former diplomat Kourosh Ahmadi examined the growing impasse after Trump reportedly rejected Iran’s latest 14-point proposal as “completely unacceptable.”

According to Tasnim and IRIB, Tehran’s proposal included demands for the withdrawal of US forces from Iran’s periphery, war reparations, full sanctions relief and a new legal framework for the Strait of Hormuz.

Ahmadi argued that the recent exchange of written messages marked a regression from even the already limited framework of indirect negotiations.

“This is no longer substantive diplomacy,” he wrote, describing the process instead as “negotiating about the method of negotiation.”

He argued that Trump remains focused on Iran’s 60 percent uranium enrichment while Tehran continues prioritizing sovereignty and economic compensation, leaving little common ground.

Rather than full-scale war, Ahmadi predicted prolonged “low-intensity military encounters,” tighter naval blockades and sustained economic pressure aimed at keeping Iran unstable.

In Etemad, foreign policy analyst Morteza Makki argued that after 40 days of military confrontation both Tehran and Washington are now effectively “forced” to seek some form of agreement.

Makki said the conflict had reshaped regional dynamics, arguing that despite heavy costs Iran had preserved key strategic objectives and demonstrated deterrence in the Persian Gulf, while Washington had failed to secure broader goals despite military escalation and operations such as Operation Freedom.

“The White House is now managing the costs of war rather than leading an offensive,” he said.

Makki pointed to domestic pressures in the United States, fears of rising energy prices and reluctance among Arab allies such as Saudi Arabia to enter a broader conflict.

He concluded that both the nuclear issue and the Strait of Hormuz remain negotiable if political will exists, but argued that China is now the only power capable of offering guarantees Tehran would trust.

“It seems China is the only country that can play an effective role in creating space for dialogue and guaranteeing a stable agreement between Iran and the U.S.,” he said.

Expanding on China’s role, Iran’s former ambassador to Beijing Hamid Aboutalebi argued in a Fararu commentary that the confrontation has evolved beyond a regional crisis into a test of China’s willingness to defend partners against US pressure.

He wrote that the conflict was no longer simply about sanctions or Iran’s nuclear program, but about whether Beijing is prepared to challenge a US-centered global order.

According to Aboutalebi, if China succeeds in building alternative financial and energy networks while defending partners such as Iran, Tehran could evolve from an isolated sanctioned state into a key player in an emerging multipolar order.

But if Beijing retreats under pressure, he warned, it would expose the limits of Chinese power despite its global ambitions.

He argued that tensions surrounding the Strait of Hormuz have elevated the conflict into a broader geopolitical contest, increasingly forcing China to balance its ambitions as a global power against its dependence on stability and open trade routes.

Iran’s ‘Death to America’ chant is a ‘promise’, Senator Rick Scott says

May 14, 2026, 03:23 GMT+1

US Senator Rick Scott said on Wednesday Iran’s “Death to America” slogan should be taken seriously, calling it a “promise” rather than a political chant.

"Iran has chanted “Death to America” for nearly half a century. To them, that’s not a slogan; it’s a promise. When your enemy tells you who they are, BELIEVE THEM. Victory for America is not an option, it’s the ONLY option," he posted on X.