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Iran said on Friday it was looking for actions, not words, from the United States after sources said President Donald Trump was weighing an initial US-Iranian agreement to extend a ceasefire and open the Strait of Hormuz.
The comments by Iran’s top negotiator, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, were in line with previous defiant statements from Iran but added to questions over how such an agreement might unfold.
According to four sources familiar with the matter, a deal would extend the truce in place since early April for 60 days and allow oil and gas shipments through the strategic waterway while negotiators tackle difficult issues such as Iran’s nuclear program.
Trump has not yet approved the deal, the sources said, and Iran’s Tasnim news agency reiterated that the text had not been finalised, adding that it had undergone changes in recent days.
“We do not trust guarantees and words; only actions are the criterion. No action will be taken before the other side acts,” Qalibaf said in a social media post.
“The winner of any agreement is the one who is better prepared for war the day after.”
The conflict launched by the US and Israel against Iran on February 28 has killed thousands of people, mainly in Iran and Lebanon, and caused global economic pain by pushing up energy prices due to Iran’s effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz to energy shipments.
Oil futures fell 2% on Friday and were on track for their steepest weekly decline since early April on the reports of a potential deal, which, if approved by Trump and leaders in Iran, would be the war’s biggest step towards peace.
The foreign minister of mediator Pakistan, Ishaq Dar, arrived in Washington on Friday for talks with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio that were expected to include the latest developments in the negotiations.
The sources said on Thursday that a deal would specify unrestricted shipping through the strait and would require the US to lift its blockade of Iranian ports. The US. would also lift some sanctions on Iranian oil sales.
Washington imposed sanctions on some more vessels linked to Iran’s oil trade on Thursday and said it would stop Iran’s airlines from refuelling.
Trump has repeatedly said an end to the war is close since mid-March, though the two sides have shown little public movement toward common ground.
Iran has called for sanctions to be lifted, foreign assets to be unfrozen, and US forces to be withdrawn from the region. Washington has called for Iran to dismantle its nuclear program, which Tehran says is for peaceful purposes.
Iran says any peace deal must also end US ally Israel’s attacks in Lebanon, but that conflict shows no signs of flagging.
Israel has displaced hundreds of thousands of people with a push deep into Lebanon in pursuit of Iran’s main ally, Hezbollah.
The most urgent issue is the freeing of traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, which carried a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments before the conflict.
No oil tankers transited the strait in the past 24 hours, although a Chinese-flagged vehicle carrier did cross, according to MarineTraffic data, which captures only vessels actively broadcasting their positions, as shown at 1200 GMT on Friday.
Several supertankers and LNG carriers departed earlier this week.
Iranian state television said 24 vessels had passed through the strait in the past 24 hours, reiterating that none would transit without authorisation from Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.