US, Iran enter technical talks to secure peace deal, shipping restart
- The talks are based on a 14-point interim accord signed last month
Indirect technical talks between the United States and Iran are underway in Doha, mediated by Qatar and Pakistan, to lay the groundwork for future sessions.
- US and Iran indirect technical talks in Doha.
- Qatar and Pakistan's mediation efforts.
- Key US figures involved in groundwork.
DOHA/DUBAI: The US and Iran held technical talks in Doha on Wednesday as they seek to agree on the flow of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and secure a lasting ceasefire, a source with direct knowledge of the talks and an Iranian official said.
US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and envoy Steve Witkoff met the prime minister of Qatar — a mediator in the talks alongside Pakistan — to lay groundwork for the negotiations, but would not be attending the discussions themselves, the source with direct knowledge of the talks said.
The talks are based on a 14-point interim accord signed last month that was meant to halt the war that began with US-Israeli strikes on Iran in February and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, whilst setting up 60 days of negotiations for a permanent peace deal.
However, the US and Iran have sparred publicly over the meaning of the interim pact, leading to tit-for-tat military strikes over the past week.
Iran is determined to win international recognition of its control over the strait and its ability to levy fees on ships entering or leaving the Gulf even if it has to do so by force, two senior Iranian sources said on Wednesday.
Traffic has partially resumed through the strait, which handled one-fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas trade before the war.
Focus on Hormuz, frozen assets
The talks in Doha are structured as sessions between chief negotiators and specialists, the source with knowledge of the talks said. They began on Tuesday night and were continuing on Wednesday, said the Iranian official.
Iran has stated publicly that its priorities include agreeing on management of the strait and the release of $6 billion in Iranian frozen assets, and the Iranian official said the current round of discussions would focus on those two issues.
The stated priority of the US is to ensure the free flow of traffic through the strait, the source with knowledge of the talks said.
Iran’s state media said on Wednesday a foreign container ship had run aground in the Strait of Hormuz after entering shallow waters outside the shipping route designated by Iranian authorities.
“Hormuz continues to reopen but it’s patchy, unpredictable, and not fully transparent,” said Vandana Hari, founder of oil market analysis provider Vanda Insights.
The war triggered Iranian attacks on Gulf states hosting US military bases and killed thousands of people, mainly in Iran and Lebanon, as well as pushing up oil and fuel prices.
Intensive diplomacy on Lebanon
Trump faces political pressure to contain the economic fallout from the war before midterm elections in November that will determine control of the US Congress. In Iran, the theocratic leadership survived the war but faces domestic anger over a shattered economy.
Oil prices, which dipped sharply in the second quarter of the year, fell more than 1% on Wednesday.
The interim deal between the US and Iran also provides for an end to a parallel conflict between Israel and Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon.
The US has backed a separate track of talks between Israel and Lebanon’s government, which produced a framework security deal that Hezbollah has dismissed and analysts warn could entrench Israel’s occupation of Lebanon’s south.
There had been intensive diplomatic activity on Lebanon between parties including the US up to Tuesday evening, the source with knowledge of the talks said.