Iran threatens total halt to talks amid intensive US air activity over Hormuz
Iran's Revolutionary Guard said US strikes violated the Islamabad Memorandum and will lead to a full suspension of processes, while intensive US military flights over the Strait of Hormuz signal possible new strikes.

US-Iran negotiations to end the war came under severe additional pressure on Sunday after the IRGC announced that Washington's strikes over the previous two days had 'violated Clause 1 of the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding' and 'will result in a total halt of all processes.' 'From now on, violating vessels will be dealt with more strongly than in the past and will face a crushing response,' the IRGC added in a statement shared by Iranian state-run media.
Trigger and Response
The immediate trigger for the weekend's escalation was the drone attack that the US attributed to Iran on Saturday on the M/T Kiku, a Panama-flagged crude oil tanker heading to the port of Fujairah in the UAE. US Central Command (CENTCOM) responded by striking 10 Iranian military targets in and near the Strait of Hormuz, including surveillance infrastructure, air defence sites, drone storage facilities and minelaying capabilities.
Tehran then launched ballistic missiles and drones at the US Fifth Fleet headquarters at Salman Port in Bahrain and the Ali Al Salem Air Base in Kuwait. Bahrain's Interior Ministry said Iranian strikes damaged a residential building near Bahrain International Airport. No fatalities were reported.
Escalation Signs
Intensive US military flight activity above the Strait of Hormuz on Sunday evening appeared to signal preparations for a new wave of strikes on Iranian military installations, following Saturday’s US strikes, and further escalation. Euronews journalists in Doha observed US Air Force Boeing KC-135R Stratotanker aerial refuelling aircraft taking off from the Qatari capital on Sunday evening, joining a number of US Air Force aircraft circling over the Gulf region near the Strait of Hormuz, as shown by the air traffic-tracking portal Flightradar24. Their flight pattern resembled that of the US air strikes on Iranian targets on Saturday night.
Statements from Both Sides
US Ambassador to the UN Mike Waltz said on Sunday afternoon that 'if the Iranian regime thinks for a second that President Trump is going to sit by, stand by, while Iran continues to attack international shipping without a response, or our bases without a response, they’re sadly mistaken.' Waltz said Washington would 'continue to, militarily, if needed, take down their infrastructure' used to 'illegally control an international waterway.' He also said talks were continuing and Trump 'will always give diplomacy a chance,' but warned 'the president’s patience isn’t going to last forever.'
IRGC spokesman Hossein Mohebi countered on Sunday, stating that 'each time the enemy violates agreements or a ceasefire, it will receive a response more severe than before,' adding that Washington is 'deceitful and unreliable.'
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, speaking at a press conference in Baghdad, said the strait would remain under Iran's full oversight for the next 30 days and that Tehran had sole responsibility for administering the waterway under the framework deal. Iran's state television announced designated safe transit routes: inbound ships were directed south of Hormuz Island and outbound vessels south of Larak Island.
The UKMTO separately raised its threat level in the Strait of Hormuz from 'moderate' to 'substantial' following what it described as 'attacks on merchant vessels,' advising mariners of mines and naval clearance operations under way.
Ayatollah's Call for War Crimes Trials
Meanwhile, on Sunday, a statement purported to be issued by Iran’s Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei called for US and Israeli leaders to be tried for what it called 'war crimes.' 'International criminals, global arrogant powers and aggressors' must be pursued in domestic and international courts for the 'imposed wars' on Iranians, the statement said, listing 'child killings and war crimes in Minab and Lamerd,' as well as other 'damage.'
Mojtaba Khamenei has not been seen in public since the initial salvo of the war on 28 February, when his father, the late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed in strikes on Tehran. The younger Khamenei has since addressed the nation solely through written statements read on state-run television. His whereabouts and condition remain unknown.
Mohammad Mokhber, an adviser to Mojtaba Khamenei, warned the US that any attempt at control in the Strait of Hormuz would be 'a mistake.' 'Trampling the latest memorandum of understanding and returning to an aggressive posture only strengthen our resolve to stand firm,' Mokhber stated.
Casualty and Shipping Challenge
In a further development on Sunday, Qatar’s Interior Ministry announced that a Qatari national was killed in an incident at sea 'after sustaining injuries from shrapnel resulting from the military operations in the area.' 'An Arab resident was injured' and transferred to hospital.
On Saturday, the US Navy's Joint Maritime Information Center announced a widened shipping route through the Strait of Hormuz near the Omani coast, allowing increased traffic in both directions, in a direct challenge to Iran's assertion of sole authority over navigation in the waterway.

