Iran Rejects Temporary Ceasefire, Says It Has Already Laid Out Terms for Agreement
Senior Iranian official tells Drop Site that Trump is
pushing for a deal but the new proposal is “detached from the realities on the
ground.”
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https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/iran-trump-war-ceasefire-pakistan
Tehran rejects any agreement for a temporary ceasefire
to end the war with the U.S. and Israel, a senior Iranian official told Drop
Site, saying that Iran would only accept an agreement that leads to a permanent
end to the fighting. The official, who was not authorized to make public
statements and spoke on condition of anonymity, said recent proposals for a
temporary pause in exchange for resumption of full access to the Strait of
Hormuz were “detached from the realities on the ground.”
In the face of new threats by President Donald Trump
to escalate the war on Iran, Reuters reported Monday on a Pakistani-led
framework to end the fighting that had been shared with both Washington and
Tehran. The framework reportedly calls for a temporary ceasefire in exchange
for a resumption of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, with 15-20 days given
to reach a final settlement that would address Iran’s nuclear program,
sanctions relief, and a regional framework for administering the strait.
The senior Iranian official who spoke with Drop Site
confirmed that Tehran had received the proposal but reiterated that Iran
rejects any agreement based on a temporary ceasefire. “It is our assessment
that the Trump administration, owing to legal constraints within the United
States concerning the prosecution of the war as well as the need to maintain
control over financial markets, requires a short-term pause in the conflict,”
said the official. He added that Iran would only accept an agreement that ended
the war against Iran conclusively, and which could then be used as a basis for
broader talks. The official also pointed to Iran’s February proposal in Geneva
that included significant concessions on its nuclear program and a
non-aggression pact as a basis for a permanent agreement.
“Our assessment indicates that this [new, temporary]
proposal has been drafted solely on the basis of the mediators’ perception of
the minimum demands of the parties for halting the war,” the official said.
“Tehran does not consider a temporary ceasefire to be a logical course of
action, inasmuch as the window for the United States’ exit from the conflict
has already been delineated. Should the requisite political will exist, the
parties are in a position to establish a permanent ceasefire and thereafter concentrate
their efforts on diplomacy.”
The White House did not immediately respond to a
request for comment. An administration official speaking to CNN on Monday said
Trump has yet to sign off on the proposal, and that it is “one of many ideas.”
Prior to the outbreak of the war, Tehran proposed
unprecedented concessions on its nuclear program during February talks in
Geneva that both UK and Omani participants considered sufficient for making progress towards a final agreement.
In a dramatic intervention, Omani foreign minister Badr Albusaidi said in an
interview with “Face the Nation” that a “peace deal is within our reach” and
asked for more time to continue the talks. Shortly after that last round of
negotiations, however, rather than engaging with the concessions, the U.S. and
Israel launched a surprise attack on Tehran that included the assassination of
the country’s head of state and many other senior officials.
Special envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law
Jared Kushner were later accused by nuclear experts of failing to understand
the significance of the technical concessions Iran was proposing in Geneva.
Notably, while Iran brought a team of technical experts to the negotiations,
Witkoff and Kushner did not.
The senior Iranian official who spoke to Drop Site
indicated that the framework for negotiations in February could still serve as
a basis for a durable agreement between Tehran and Washington. “The latest
proposal put forward by Iran prior to the commencement of the unlawful
US-Israeli war would fully address the United States’ concerns regarding
nuclear weapons through a posture of maximum flexibility on the part of Iran,
accompanied by extensive monitoring by the International Atomic Energy Agency,”
he said.
As Drop Site has previously reported, Iran’s terms for permanently ending the war include
a long-term guarantee that the U.S. and Israel will not attack Iran again and
that any ceasefire also apply to Lebanon, Iraq and Palestine; reparations for
the damages done to Iran during the war; sanctions relief; and that Iran retain
control over the Strait of Hormuz.
On Easter morning, Trump posted a profanity-laced statement on Truth Social
laying out a Tuesday deadline for Iran to capitulate to U.S. demands to reopen
the Strait of Hormuz. “Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all
wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!! Open the Fuckin’
Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell - JUST WATCH! Praise be
to Allah.”
Throughout the war, as global economic harm continues
to mount, Trump has repeatedly claimed in public speeches and posts on Truth
Social that Iran is “begging” for a deal, only to follow with threats to attack
oil and infrastructure targets after Iranian denials.
Trump’s recent public statements regarding the Strait
of Hormuz reflect a shifting timeline of deadlines and escalating warnings: an
initial 48-hour ultimatum on March 21 to reopen the strait was paused on March
23 for “productive” talks—a claim Tehran rejected, labeling it “fake news” intended to manipulate
markets. The deadline was later extended on March 26 by ten days, with Trump
expanding his threats on March 30 to include oil wells, Kharg Island, and
desalination plants . On April 1, he again claimed that Tehran was seeking a
ceasefire, despite repeated Iranian denials, issued another 48-hour warning on
April 4, and pushed the deadline once more.
“This threat isn’t new, and Iran has already made its
position clear if such a crime were to happen,” the official said regarding
Trump’s frequent threats. Iran has repeatedly said that it will retaliate to
such attacks by targeting U.S.-linked infrastructure across the
region—potentially including critical energy and water desalination facilities
in both Israel and the Gulf Arab states.
The Pakistani framework, aimed at heading off the
Tuesday deadline, was reportedly developed in the context of messages exchanged
“all night long” between Pakistani army chief Asim Munir, Vice President J.D.
Vance, Witkoff, and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. The putative
agreement would be known as the “Islamabad Accords,” providing a temporary end
to the fighting and arrangements for final status talks in the future between
the U.S. and Iran.
Yet the staged nature of the proposal would leave Iran
open to future attacks by the U.S. and Israel—both of which have repeatedly
used prior negotiations as a means to prepare assets for attacks against Iran,
even targeting and killing negotiators themselves.
In late March, the Trump administration reportedly
issued a 15-point plan for an agreement with Iran, including a 30-day
ceasefire, the total dismantlement of the Iranian nuclear program, limits on
Iran’s ballistic missile program, an end to Tehran’s support for armed
resistance groups, and immediate reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. That
reported plan matched much of what Washington had demanded even before the war
started and was dismissed as “extremely maximalist and unreasonable” by Iranian
officials.
Amid a general lack of trust in Washington’s
willingness or even ability to negotiate an agreement, Iran issued its own list
of conditions for a peace deal—including guarantees that the war would not
resume, an end to attacks in Lebanon, Gaza, and Iraq, reparations for war
damages suffered during the fighting, and recognition of Iranian right to
exercise authority over the Strait of Hormuz.
The issue of the strait has now become a core point of
contention between the two sides. While the strategic waterway was open before
the U.S.-Israeli attack, Iran has now managed to assert de facto sovereignty
over it—controlling access to which ships may transit and even charging fees
for passage to those that meet its criteria. Iran has also stated that ships
associated with hostile countries will not be allowed to pass.
While an accumulating global oil shock has continued
to build due to the disruption of energy shipments, the Iranian parliament has
already passed measures aimed at normalizing its control of access to the
strait going forward. The proposed Pakistani deal calls for opening the
waterway immediately in exchange for a temporary end to the fighting—a proposal
that Tehran said it rejects.
“The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for
the establishment of a temporary ceasefire is not acceptable. Tehran has
finalized a new mechanism for oversight, inspection, and secure navigation in
the Strait and will shortly present it to the countries of the region for their
participation. At present, Iran’s bilateral arrangements with various states
have already established the necessary groundwork for the safe passage of a
number of vessels, serving as a pilot project for the exercise of Iranian
sovereignty,” the senior Iranian official told Drop Site.
The official added that Tehran would be willing to
negotiate renewal of access to U.S.-linked ships as part of a broader peace
agreement. “Naturally, the passage of vessels associated with the United States
can constitute a subject for discussion between the parties within the
framework of comprehensive Iran-United States negotiations, wherein a shared
understanding on the matter may be reached,” he said.
Initially described as a short “excursion” that would
be wrapped up within days, the war with Iran has increasingly come to look like
a major quagmire for the Trump administration. In addition to asserting control
over one of the world’s most vital maritime shipping routes, Iran has managed
to maintain a steady rate of fire at Israel and the Gulf Arab states over more
than a month of fighting—inflicting increasing damage as limited stocks of
missile interceptors have been drained, and forcing the U.S. to transfer
critical munitions from East Asia to the Middle East.
In addition to killing thousands of civilians, the
U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has done tremendous damage to Iranian infrastructure,
including recent attacks on universities, bridges, and petrochemical
facilities.
In the face of repeated threats of regime change, and
attempts to cause the dissolution of the country through attacks on civilian
infrastructure and support for violent separatist groups, Iranian officials say
that they have now prepared for a longer war of attrition and will not accept
any agreement that merely serves as a pause to enable Israel and the U.S. to
recover and prepare for future attacks.
The U.S. “appears to envisage the pursuit of the
collapse of Iranian sovereignty by repeating this war-ceasefire cycle until the
third year of [Trump’s] presidency,” the senior Iranian official told Drop
Site. “For this reason, we consider it probable that President Trump may
unilaterally declare a temporary ceasefire, in which event the Strait will
continue to be administered by Iran through the new mechanism.”
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