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US and Iran Agree Two-Week Ceasefire After Pakistan-Led Mediation

The United States and Iran have agreed to a two-week ceasefire following last-minute diplomatic efforts led by Pakistan, halting a looming escalation after US President Donald Trump had warned Tehran to surrender or face large-scale military attacks.

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Trump announced the agreement on Tuesday evening, less than two hours before a self-imposed 8pm Eastern Time deadline he had set for potential US strikes on Iranian power plants and bridges. Legal experts, officials from several countries and the Pope had cautioned that such attacks on civilian infrastructure could constitute war crimes.

Earlier in the day, Trump had posted on the social media platform Truth Social warning that “a whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again”, adding that he did not want that outcome but believed it was likely. Reports indicated that B-52 bombers were already heading toward Iran before the ceasefire was confirmed.

Pakistan mediation

According to Trump, the ceasefire was brokered after intervention by Pakistan’s government. Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had requested a two-week pause in hostilities to allow diplomatic negotiations to continue.

In a statement on social media, Trump said he would suspend bombing operations “subject to the Islamic Republic of Iran agreeing to the COMPLETE, IMMEDIATE, and SAFE OPENING of the Strait of Hormuz”.

He added that the pause in fighting would provide time for both sides to negotiate around a 10-point proposal presented by Tehran that could lead to a more permanent armistice.

“This will be a double sided CEASEFIRE,” Trump wrote, saying US military objectives had already been met and that progress was being made toward a broader agreement aimed at long-term peace in the Middle East.

Iran confirms agreement

Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, confirmed shortly afterwards that Tehran had accepted the temporary ceasefire.

In a statement, he said safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz would be permitted during the two-week period, coordinated with Iran’s armed forces.

The strait is one of the world’s most important energy shipping routes, carrying about a fifth of global oil supplies. Shipping traffic there had slowed significantly during the five-week conflict as tensions escalated.

Axios reported, citing an Israeli official, that Israel would also observe the ceasefire once Iran lifted its blockade of the waterway.

Escalation before the truce

Before the agreement was announced, tensions had continued to rise.

Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations, Amir-Saeid Iravani, told a UN Security Council session that Trump’s threats amounted to “incitement to war crimes – and potentially genocide”. He warned that Iran would exercise its right to self-defence if attacks continued.

The United Nations secretary-general, António Guterres, also reiterated that international law prohibits attacks on civilian infrastructure. Trump, however, said earlier he was “not at all” concerned about accusations that such actions could amount to war crimes.

In the hours leading up to the deadline, Israeli forces carried out strikes on Iranian infrastructure. Iranian state media reported that a railway bridge in the central city of Kashan was hit, killing two people. Other reported strikes targeted bridges near Karaj, Qom and Tabriz, while power outages were reported in Karaj after a substation and transmission lines were damaged.

The United States also launched attacks on around 50 military targets on Kharg Island, home to Iran’s main oil export terminal. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they had retaliated by striking Saudi Arabia’s Jubail petrochemical complex following an earlier attack on an Iranian petrochemical facility.

The ceasefire pauses a conflict that has lasted five weeks, during which fighting intensified with little indication that Tehran would surrender or relinquish control over the Strait of Hormuz.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now. Source 8 April 2026

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Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
3 minutes ago, MikeandDow said:

You yanks will be paying for this

the statement has said that the US has agreed to:

  • Guarantee not to repeat its "aggression" against Iran

  • The continuation of Iran’s control over the Strait of Hormuz

  • Acceptance of [uranium] enrichment

  • Lifting of all primary and secondary sanctions

  • Termination of all resolutions of the [UN] Security Council and International Atomic Energy Agency

  • Payment of compensation to Iran

  • Withdrawal of US combat forces from the region

  • And the cessation of war on all fronts, including against the "Islamic resistance of Lebanon"

When did Trump agree to all of this?

Lacessit Star Member

Lacessit

Advanced Member
8 hours ago, Rockyroad said:

How did he lose the war?

A better question is, what has he gained? A temporary respite in the blockade, which Iran can start again any time it wants.

He lost nearly $1 billion a day. Not him of course, just the American taxpayer. He lost the respect of every ally America has or had.

Hegseth now claims the military needs another $1.5 trillion. That's going to be funded by cuts to education and health.

Anyone want to call that a win for Americans?

MikeandDow Ruby Member

MikeandDow

Advanced Member
4 minutes ago, Rockyroad said:

When did Trump agree to all of this?

read the news

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
2 minutes ago, MikeandDow said:

read the news

I just did and he has not agreed. You are a bs artist.

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
  • Trump’s Stance: On April 8, 2026, President Trump described this proposal on Truth Social as a "workable basis on which to negotiate" rather than an outright agreement.

  • The Conflict: While he agreed to a two-week provisional ceasefire to review the plan, significant friction remains. The plan includes demands that the U.S. likely finds unacceptable, such as continued Iranian control over the Strait of Hormuz, the lifting of all sanctions, and the acceptance of Iran's uranium enrichment program.

  • Status: Negotiations are scheduled to begin in Islamabad, but Trump has already labeled parts of the proposal "fraudulent" in follow-up comments, suggesting a full agreement is far from settled.

dinsdale Star Member

dinsdale

Advanced Member
9 hours ago, b17 said:

committed war crimes on day one (165 girls killed)

School targeted war crime. School not targeted/mistakenly hit not a war crime. Are you saying the US targeted the school?

Lacessit Star Member

Lacessit

Advanced Member
40 minutes ago, Rockyroad said:

Did you lose money because of the war?

Everyone lost money. Fuel prices went up 25%. Airfares took off to the stratosphere. Tourism fell off a cliff.

You have my nomination for the most moronic post on this thread. Harrisfan, bignok, susanlea or whatever your alter egos are.

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
1 minute ago, Lacessit said:

Everyone lost money. Fuel prices went up 25%. Airfares took off to the stratosphere. Tourism fell off a cliff.

You have my nomination for the most moronic post on this thread.

I lost about $50 due to the higher fuel prices. My plane tickets have not increased. My food costs are the same. Nothing else has changed. You must be a truck driver if your life changed a lot. The baht has weakened so overall probably got my $50 back. So no difference at all.

Lacessit Star Member

Lacessit

Advanced Member
4 minutes ago, Rockyroad said:

I lost about $50 due to the higher fuel prices. My plane tickets have not increased. My food costs are the same. Nothing else has changed. You must be a truck driver if your life changed a lot. The baht has weakened so overall probably got my $50 back. So no difference at all.

I think I will save myself some time. Bye now.

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
1 minute ago, Lacessit said:

I think I will save myself some time. Bye now.

Well prove me wrong. The Thai baht is 5% weaker now. My plane tickets were the same price as last year. None of the foods I eat have changed. I lost $50 on fuel but got it back with a weaker baht.

The oil price has crashed 17% now. More good news.

xylophone Diamond Member

xylophone

Advanced Member

On a slightly different note, I have just watched Hegseth and co- prattle on about how they "won the war", which went into quite a lot of detail, including the amount of coffee which was consumed by the US troops (yes, believe it) and it really became a "boast fest" as to how the largest military in the world had overcome a country of almost "Stone Age" people.

I've been around since the end of the Second World War and I don't ever remember any country boasting like the US has done about any of the wars that have been fought, and as for this "war" and "truce", it speaks so much about them, and simply reinforces the fact that the current Administration consists of a bunch of clowns and idiots – – nothing more, nothing less.

GroveHillWanderer Platinum Member

GroveHillWanderer

Advanced Member
43 minutes ago, Rockyroad said:

UAE, Iraq, Israel and Saudis.

Everything I've seen says those countries are merely "considering" new pipelines. There are no sources that I can find, stating they have started building them.

If you have such sources, please provide them - otherwise your claims are baseless.

Gulf states consider new pipelines to avoid Strait of Hormuz

Conflict prompts countries to revisit plans that replicate Saudi Arabia’s East-West pipeline despite huge cost and complexity

https://www.ft.com/content/880664d8-e110-4760-8b00-aa3141a770ff

GroveHillWanderer Platinum Member

GroveHillWanderer

Advanced Member
35 minutes ago, Rockyroad said:

https://www.iraq-businessnews.com/2025/01/01/iraq-approves-4-5bn-basra-haditha-oil-pipeline/

That pipeline is still only at the proposal stage. So your claim that countries (plural) are building pipelines (plural) remains inaccurate.

Here's an article dated 8 April, 2026 (i.e. today, as I write this).

Iraq to start receiving bids for Basra-Haditha oil pipeline project

Baghdad (IraqiNews.com) – The Iraqi cabinet authorized on Tuesday the Oil Ministry to directly invite specialized companies to submit proposals for the Basra-Haditha oil pipeline project.

https://www.iraqinews.com/iraq/iraq-to-start-receiving-bids-for-basra-haditha-oil-pipeline-project/

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
1 minute ago, GroveHillWanderer said:

That pipeline is still only at the proposal stage. So your claim that countries (plural) are building pipelines (plural) remains inaccurate.

Here's an article dated 8 April, 2026 (i.e. today, as I write this).

Iraq to start receiving bids for Basra-Haditha oil pipeline project

Baghdad (IraqiNews.com) – The Iraqi cabinet authorized on Tuesday the Oil Ministry to directly invite specialized companies to submit proposals for the Basra-Haditha oil pipeline project.

https://www.iraqinews.com/iraq/iraq-to-start-receiving-bids-for-basra-haditha-oil-pipeline-project/

Tell someone who cares.

Jim Blue Platinum Member

Jim Blue

Advanced Member
9 hours ago, Rockyroad said:

How did he lose the war?

9 hours ago, Rockyroad said:

He bombed Iran over 10,000 times. Iran bombed America soil 0 times. How do you American haters come to make such ridiculous conclusions. You must be high on drugs, alcohol or out of touch with reality.

10,000 times ?

I thought this was a man who came in peace ?

dinsdale Star Member

dinsdale

Advanced Member
9 minutes ago, xylophone said:

On a slightly different note, I have just watched Hegseth and co- prattle on about how they "won the war", which went into quite a lot of detail, including the amount of coffee which was consumed by the US troops (yes, believe it) and it really became a "boast fest" as to how the largest military in the world had overcome a country of almost "Stone Age" people.

I've been around since the end of the Second World War and I don't ever remember any country boasting like the US has done about any of the wars that have been fought, and as for this "war" and "truce", it speaks so much about them, and simply reinforces the fact that the current Administration consists of a bunch of clowns and idiots – – nothing more, nothing less.

So do you think it's too early to call total victory? IMHO it may be. Let's see what happens in the next two weeks. One thing is certain though. The Islamic regime has got smacked and got smacked very, very hard and have accepted a ceasefire and it seems the strait will be open to all shipping traffic. Regime is still in place for now but regime change was not part of the military strategy. As for "the largest military in the world had overcome a country of almost "Stone Age" people" this is simply a crazy comment. Fact is the US is the most powerful armed force in the world and the Islamic regime were no match for the combined forces of the US and the IDF. To call them "stone age" though is well off the mark. In the Middle East they WERE quite powerful.

dinsdale Star Member

dinsdale

Advanced Member
Just now, Jim Blue said:

10,000 times ?

I thought this was a man who came in peace ?

Alas peace sometimes can only be achieved through violence. Let's hope in the not too distant future the people of Iran can live a peaceful existence free from the tyranny of a fundamentalist terror based Islamic regime.

G Rex Gold Member

G Rex

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, CallumWK said:

From the Resolute Desk of Donald J Trump

Oh we did it, folks. We did it. Nobody thought it could be done. They said, “Sir, it’s impossible. Nobody can do this.” And I said, watch. Just watch. And now, ceasefire. The greatest ceasefire. Two weeks. Nobody’s ever seen anything like it. Beautiful.

Iran, very tough people, very tough, they were saying no, no, no. And then they said yes. They said, “Sir… please.” I get that a lot. “Sir, please, can we make a deal?” And I said, maybe. Maybe we do, maybe we don’t. That’s negotiation. That’s called leverage. A lot of people don’t understand leverage. I do. The best.

We were ready, by the way. Totally ready. Planes in the air, the best planes, stealth, not even visible, you wouldn’t even see them. Bridges, power plants, boom, boom, done. Very fast. Would’ve been over in like, what, an hour? Maybe less. People said it would be the end of everything. I said, we don’t want that. We want peace. But strong peace. My kind of peace.

Then I get a call, very important call, from Shehbaz Sharif. Great guy. Highly respected. Everybody respects him. He says, “Sir, could you give it two weeks?” And I said… you know what? For you, maybe we do something. Because I like him. Good relationship. Incredible relationship. The best relationships.

And Iran sends over, ten points. Ten beautiful points. Some people are saying the most beautiful points they’ve ever seen. A lot of detail. Very smart. And I looked at it, very quickly, because I understand things very quickly, much faster than other people, and I said, this is workable. This is a deal. This is maybe the deal. Historic.

But I told them, very strongly, forcefully, OPEN the Strait. Open it. Completely, immediately, safely. The Strait of Hormuz, very important. A lot of oil. A lot of ships. The most ships. Nobody knew how important it was until I said it. Now everybody’s talking about it.

So I said, you open it, we pause. Two weeks. Not forever, because you need strength, but two weeks. And they said okay, we’ll think about it. Which means yes, by the way. That’s what that means. People don’t know that. I know that.

And now you have a double-sided ceasefire. Double-sided. Nobody’s ever done that. Usually it’s one side, maybe the other side cheats. Not here. Not with me. This is fair. Very fair. The most fair.

We’ve already won, by the way. Militarily completely. Easter was great, militarily. Totally. We achieved everything. More than anyone expected. Some generals came up to me, big strong guys, tears in their eyes, and they said, “Sir, we’ve never seen anything like this.” And I said, I know. I know.

So now we finish it. Two weeks. We finalize, we consummate, very important word, consummate, the agreement. Long-term peace. Maybe forever. Maybe longer than forever. And if not… well, we know what happens. And they know too.

But right now? Peace. Strength. Respect. Everybody’s calling. Everybody wants to be part of it. They’re saying this is the greatest negotiation ever done.

And it is. It really is.

Thank you for your attention to this matter!

Nicked from FB LOL

Pure GOLD!

Chomper Higgot Star Member

Chomper Higgot

Advanced Member
20 minutes ago, Rockyroad said:

Tell someone who cares.

I’ll run it by an Iranian I know Rashan Firis, but he’s not online at the moment.

stevenl Star Member

stevenl

Advanced Member

If Trump can not control Nethanyahu, there's not going to be peace.

Yellowtail Star Member

Yellowtail

Advanced Member
14 hours ago, Chomper Higgot said:

A small point of note, there are three sides in this war.

Which side are you on?

Cave Johnson Senior Member

Cave Johnson

Member

A decent use of AI at last

dinsdale Star Member

dinsdale

Advanced Member
6 hours ago, Chomper Higgot said:

More to the point, Israel’s leverage over US politics is now getting the public scrutiny it deserves.

Turns out Israel wasn't involved in the ceasefire and aren't particularly happy about it. Doesn't exactly fit your narrative. As for public scrutiny what public scrutiny. MSM scrutiny?

xylophone Diamond Member

xylophone

Advanced Member
3 hours ago, CallumWK said:

From the Resolute Desk of Donald J Trump

Oh we did it, folks. We did it. Nobody thought it could be done. They said, “Sir, it’s impossible. Nobody can do this.” And I said, watch. Just watch. And now, ceasefire. The greatest ceasefire. Two weeks. Nobody’s ever seen anything like it. Beautiful.

Iran, very tough people, very tough, they were saying no, no, no. And then they said yes. They said, “Sir… please.” I get that a lot. “Sir, please, can we make a deal?” And I said, maybe. Maybe we do, maybe we don’t. That’s negotiation. That’s called leverage. A lot of people don’t understand leverage. I do. The best.

We were ready, by the way. Totally ready. Planes in the air, the best planes, stealth, not even visible, you wouldn’t even see them. Bridges, power plants, boom, boom, done. Very fast. Would’ve been over in like, what, an hour? Maybe less. People said it would be the end of everything. I said, we don’t want that. We want peace. But strong peace. My kind of peace.

Then I get a call, very important call, from Shehbaz Sharif. Great guy. Highly respected. Everybody respects him. He says, “Sir, could you give it two weeks?” And I said… you know what? For you, maybe we do something. Because I like him. Good relationship. Incredible relationship. The best relationships.

And Iran sends over, ten points. Ten beautiful points. Some people are saying the most beautiful points they’ve ever seen. A lot of detail. Very smart. And I looked at it, very quickly, because I understand things very quickly, much faster than other people, and I said, this is workable. This is a deal. This is maybe the deal. Historic.

But I told them, very strongly, forcefully, OPEN the Strait. Open it. Completely, immediately, safely. The Strait of Hormuz, very important. A lot of oil. A lot of ships. The most ships. Nobody knew how important it was until I said it. Now everybody’s talking about it.

So I said, you open it, we pause. Two weeks. Not forever, because you need strength, but two weeks. And they said okay, we’ll think about it. Which means yes, by the way. That’s what that means. People don’t know that. I know that.

And now you have a double-sided ceasefire. Double-sided. Nobody’s ever done that. Usually it’s one side, maybe the other side cheats. Not here. Not with me. This is fair. Very fair. The most fair.

We’ve already won, by the way. Militarily completely. Easter was great, militarily. Totally. We achieved everything. More than anyone expected. Some generals came up to me, big strong guys, tears in their eyes, and they said, “Sir, we’ve never seen anything like this.” And I said, I know. I know.

So now we finish it. Two weeks. We finalize, we consummate, very important word, consummate, the agreement. Long-term peace. Maybe forever. Maybe longer than forever. And if not… well, we know what happens. And they know too.

But right now? Peace. Strength. Respect. Everybody’s calling. Everybody wants to be part of it. They’re saying this is the greatest negotiation ever done.

And it is. It really is.

Thank you for your attention to this matter!

Nicked from FB LOL

Pure sarcastic genius...........the problem being that it mirrors "trump-speak" so well that it could well be fact!!

xylophone Diamond Member

xylophone

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, dinsdale said:

So do you think it's too early to call total victory? IMHO it may be. Let's see what happens in the next two weeks. One thing is certain though. The Islamic regime has got smacked and got smacked very, very hard and have accepted a ceasefire and it seems the strait will be open to all shipping traffic. Regime is still in place for now but regime change was not part of the military strategy. As for "the largest military in the world had overcome a country of almost "Stone Age" people" this is simply a crazy comment. Fact is the US is the most powerful armed force in the world and the Islamic regime were no match for the combined forces of the US and the IDF. To call them "stone age" though is well off the mark. In the Middle East they WERE quite powerful.

That wasn't my point, which was that in other wars, the aggressor never boasted about what they had done to the other side.........that is the type of thing that the Chief Clowns of trump and hegseth do because it massages their fragile egos and they are also desperate for the support of the MAGA morons.

CallumWK Diamond Member

CallumWK

Advanced Member
37 minutes ago, dinsdale said:

Turns out Israel wasn't involved in the ceasefire and aren't particularly happy about it.

Colour me surprised that the zionist war criminals aren't happy about. What are the odds they are bombing again before the weekend?

Yellowtail Star Member

Yellowtail

Advanced Member
3 minutes ago, CallumWK said:

Colour me surprised that the zionist war criminals aren't happy about. What are the odds they are bombing again before the weekend?

For how much?

CallumWK Diamond Member

CallumWK

Advanced Member
11 hours ago, Patong2021 said:

The Strait of Hormuz was never really closed. Close to 200 known vessels had transited, with others not pubkicly declared. Not the Strai will be formerly open. The Chinese can breathe easier.

I got news for you.

https://finance.yahoo.com/markets/commodities/articles/hormuz-stays-blocked-now-hundreds-143756601.html

Hormuz stays blocked for now as hundreds of ships seek exit

(Bloomberg) — The Strait of Hormuz appeared to remain largely blocked on Wednesday, as shipowners try to understand if they can safely transit the vital waterway following a ceasefire between the US and Iran that was announced overnight.

A total of seven ships were seen exiting the region since Tuesday morning, while three vessels entered, tracking data compiled by Bloomberg show. Total peace time transits stood at about 135 a day last year. More than 800 freighters are stuck inside the gulf, mostly waiting to leave.

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