Iran has rejected a temporary ceasefire in the US-Israeli war, saying this would allow adversaries to pause and prepare for fighting to continue. It follows reports the US and Iran have received a proposal to end hostilities that could come into effect today.
Trump’s deadline: US President Donald Trump appeared to set a Tuesday deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Iran says the consequences of infrastructure attacks will stretch beyond the region. Trump will hold a news conference today on the rescue of an F-15 crew member whose jet was downed over Iran.
Israel says it killed the intelligence chief at Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) early Monday. It has targeted dozens of senior officials in the IRGC since the conflict began.
Latest strikes: Six children were among those killed in overnight Israeli-US strikes on Iran, state media reported. Four people were killed in an Iranian strike on a residential building in Haifa, Israel.
The United Arab Emirates insists that any ceasefire in Iran must address Gulf Arab states’ security concerns and avoid “a much more dangerous environment in the region,” a top official said.
Anwar Gargash, advisor to the UAE president, told CNN that Abu Dhabi wants “to see an end to this conflict, but an end to this conflict should not also create a continuous instability in the region.” Any agreement would have to address Tehran’s nuclear program as well as the missiles and drones “which are still raining on us and on other countries.”
“And then, if Iran also wants to see a non-belligerence agreement, that agreement has to extend to everybody. It’s not only American-Israeli actions against Iran, but it has to be also Iran’s belligerence against its neighbors,” he said.
Iran’s attacks on its Gulf Arab neighbors are likely to “concretize” the US role in the Gulf, “not reduce it,” he said. “We will also see Israeli influence become more prominent in the Gulf, not less.”
A key demand for Iran in stopping the war is the closure of US bases in the region, which it says are used to stage attacks against Iran.
“Our main security partner is the United States. We will double down on our relationship with the United States,” Gargash added.
He said the Strait of Hormuz has to be “part and parcel” of any settlement, “with a clear agreement on that,” adding that while the UAE is “not ready to act as a maritime force” at the strait, “we will join any American-led effort, international effort to secure navigation in the Strait of Hormuz.”
