The US and Iran remained at loggerheads over any potential truce heading into the weekend, with the conflict nearing the 100-day mark and Tehran saying that it and Oman have sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz.
Following skirmishes overnight between Hezbollah and Israel in southern Lebanon, Iran continued to insist on a ceasefire there before reaching a deal with the US. A military adviser to Iran Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei told CNN that “the ball is in Trump’s court” when it comes to a deal, insisting on the unfreezing of $24 billion in assets.
President Donald Trump has insisted for months that Iran is near its breaking point. On Friday he told reporters that “We’re having great success with Iran,” adding that “they’re in no position to have a nuclear weapon.”
But the president, in an interview with NBC News during a trip to Wisconsin, conceded that Iran had some missile and drone capacity, despite moments earlier saying that the US had “totally destroyed” the country’s military capabilities and that it was “virtually decapitated.” He said Iran still has about 21-22% of their missiles remaining.
“It’s a lot of missiles, but it’s not what it was when we first attacked,” he told the television network.
American forces shot down four more Iranian one-way attack drones headed toward the Strait of Hormuz, US Central Command said Friday evening, adding that the military “subsequently struck Iranian coastal surveillance radar sites in Goruk and on Qeshm Island to defend against further attacks.” The US earlier Friday announced that American forces had seized a sanctioned oil supertanker it said was part of Iran’s ghost fleet.
Trump earlier in the day downplayed the higher cost of oil, an increase that has helped push up gasoline prices: “People thought it was going to be a lot worse. Today I looked at $96 a barrel, people thought that was going to be $300 a barrel.”
Oil prices fell nearly 3% on Friday, with US crude trading above $90 a barrel on signs that China had curbed consumption and as American crude exports helped to plug some of the lost supplies.
Without a breakthrough, the continuing standoff suggests that Tehran believes it can bear the current level of pressure longer while betting that the political pain in the US may get the American president to concede on some of his objectives.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi earlier said there had been “no tangible progress” in talks even though the two sides continued to exchange messages via mediators. No commercial transits through the Strait of Hormuz were observed on Friday morning, with three passages in each direction seen Thursday, according to ship-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg.
US forces have counted nearly 1,000 commercial vessel transits in and out of the strait in the last two months, according to an official familiar with Central Command. The figure is still far below the more than 100 ships passing daily through the vital waterway for oil and gas from the Persian Gulf before the conflict.
As the conflict that began Feb. 28 nears the 100-day mark, Trump’s trip to Wisconsin for a domestic political event unfolded after a pair of rebukes by the Republican-led Congress over his foreign policy. The first was when the House voted to halt the war, a largely symbolic move that perhaps underscores the president’s loosening grip on Capitol Hill. Four GOP members joined Democrats in passing the measure.
Congress then passed legislation to provide additional aid to Ukraine and impose more sanctions on Russia. The moves come after a surge in inflation since the war started has eaten away at Americans’ paychecks, straining consumers who were already frustrated by the high cost of living. Sixty-four percent of Americans say going to war with Iran was the wrong decision, according to a New York Times/Siena poll taken in May.
Earlier this week, Iran fired missiles and drones at Kuwait and Bahrain, killing one person and injuring dozens at Kuwait’s main airport. That was the worst of several flareups since a fragile ceasefire between the US and Iran took hold on April 8.
Here’s more on the war:
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The US approved entry visas for Iran’s World Cup team players before the global soccer tournament, according to the New York Times. However, more than a dozen Iranian support staff and other officials were denied entry, the newspaper said.
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Iran allowed the United Nations atomic watchdog this week to visit its Bushehr nuclear power plants, while stonewalling inspectors’ demands to verify the condition and location of its enriched uranium stockpile.
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The UK and France have finalized plans to lead a multinational mine-clearing mission in the Strait of Hormuz within days of an agreement between the US and Iran to reopen the waterway, according to people familiar with the matter.
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Operations at Oman’s main crude oil export terminal at Mina Al Fahal have resumed after an explosion on Friday halted some loadings, according to traders familiar with the matter.

