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Iran lawmaker warns Trump may launch new war at any moment

Apr 26, 2026, 23:54 GMT+1

Ali Ali Khezrian, a member of Iran’s parliament National Security Commission, warned that US President Donald Trumpmay seek to launch another war against the Islamic Republic under Israeli influence.

Khezrian said US military deployments indicate an attack could begin “at any moment,” accusing Israel of influencing the decisions made in Washington.

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The hidden target in US war on Iran may be China

Apr 26, 2026, 23:43 GMT+1
•
Negar Mojtahedi

As Washington and Tehran navigate a fragile ceasefire, one of the biggest questions looming over the conflict may not be about Iran at all—but China.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping this week publicly called for the Strait of Hormuz to reopen and urged an immediate ceasefire, his clearest intervention yet in the conflict and a sign Beijing is watching events closely.

Zineb Zineb Riboua, a research fellow at the Hudson Institute who specializes in Chinese influence in the Middle East and North Africa, told Eye for Iran that the broader significance of Operation Epic Fury—the US campaign against Ira—may lie in weakening China’s strategic position through its deep ties to the Islamic Republic.

“I am in the group of those who think it is about weakening China,” Riboua said. “I don't think the administration says it this way… but I think it's a very important one.”

Beijing forced into the open

For weeks, China had largely avoided direct public comment on the Hormuz crisis despite its dependence on Persian Gulf energy flows.

Riboua said Xi’s sudden remarks reflected Beijing’s anxiety and may also have exposed China’s limited leverage over Tehran.

“For a long time there was this assumption that the United States was in decline,” she said, adding that Xi’s intervention suggests Washington may be “breaking the status quo that benefited China.”

She added that Beijing remains dependent on US positions in the strait and may lack sufficient influence to pressure Tehran directly.

Why Iran matters to China

China remains a major buyer of Iranian crude and has long benefited from Tehran’s isolation.

“China benefited on three fronts,” Riboua said. “The first one is really the oil… It's 90% of Iran’s oil that goes to China and it goes with a discount.”

China is the world’s largest crude importer, bringing in roughly 11 million barrels per day, and is exposed to any disruption in Hormuz, through which about one-fifth of global consumption passes.

Chinese buyers reportedly took more than 80% of Iran’s exported crude in 2025, often at discounts of $8 to $10 below Brent, giving Beijing a valuable cheap supply.

Any prolonged US-Iran standoff or naval blockade in Hormuz could force China to replace cheaper Iranian oil with more expensive alternatives, while higher freight and insurance costs would add further pressure.

Riboua said Iran also serves as a testing ground for sanctions evasion and alternative financial channels.

“What the Islamic Republic was useful for China is really also the sanctions evasion laboratory.”

Chinese-linked networks have used front companies, ship-to-ship transfers, relabeled cargoes and alternative payment channels to keep Iranian oil flowing despite Western restrictions.

‘US trapped in Mideast’

Iran’s efforts to weaponize the Strait of Hormuz may also have hurt one of its own most important partners.

“The Islamic Republic thought that by weaponizing the Strait of Hormuz it could coerce the US president,” Riboua said. “But in the process, they've been hurting China.”

With China heavily reliant on regional energy flows, any prolonged disruption raises the stakes for Beijing.

Riboua argued the wider contest remains centered on Asia.

“You want the Americans to be trapped in the Middle East,” she said. “That’s a perfect scenario when you're thinking about invading Taiwan.”

If Riboua is right, Operation Epic Fury may prove to be more than a campaign to curb Iran. It may mark an early move in a broader contest over China’s reach in the Middle East—and beyond.

Iran eyeing new 'phased' formula for US talks - Al Mayadeen

Apr 26, 2026, 23:33 GMT+1

Iranian officials are discussing a new formula that could lead to renewed negotiations with the United States if accepted by Washington, according to a report by Al Mayadeen’s correspondent in Tehran.

The report said Tehran’s main condition for restarting talks is a permanent end to the war on all fronts, particularly in Lebanon.

It added that discussion of the Strait of Hormuz would come in a second phase, while the nuclear issue would only be addressed in a third stage.

Unity or fracture? Tehran battles Trump’s narrative of disarray

Apr 26, 2026, 23:25 GMT+1

Assertions by US President Donald Trump that Iran’s leadership is divided, and Tehran’s increasingly coordinated effort to deny it, have thrust the issue of unity to the center of the standoff between the two countries.

Trump has repeatedly cast Iran’s leadership as fractured and disorganized. In one post, he wrote: “Iran is having a very hard time figuring out who their leader is! They just don’t know!”

As speculation spread, President Masoud Masoud Pezeshkian sought to set the tone in a social media post declaring: “In Iran there are no ‘hardliners’ or ‘moderates.’ We are all Iranians and revolutionaries.”

The message was reposted verbatim by senior officials across the political and military establishment, including judiciary chief Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei, underscoring the coordinated nature of the response.

Read the full article here.

Araghchi says neighbors remain Iran's priority after Oman talks

Apr 26, 2026, 22:58 GMT+1

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said neighboring countries remain Tehran’s priority after talks in Oman focused on regional developments and safe transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

In a post on X, Araghchi said discussions covered bilateral issues and regional developments.

He added that Iran and Oman, as the only littoral states of the Strait of Hormuz, discussed ways to ensure safe transit “to the benefit of all dear neighbors and the world.”

More Iranian crude appears to evade US blockade - TankerTrackers

Apr 26, 2026, 22:39 GMT+1

Iran has loaded at least 4.6 million barrels of crude oil at export terminals despite the ongoing US naval blockade, with an additional four million barrels appearing to have crossed the blockade line, according to satellite analysis by TankerTrackers.com.

The figures suggest Tehran retains some ability to continue oil exports despite Washington’s efforts to choke off the country’s energy revenues through maritime pressure.

Recent satellite imagery and tanker-tracking data have shown some Iranian vessels “going dark” by switching off transponders to move crude beyond the blockade zone.