Middle East
US officials pressure Netanyahu to uphold Gaza ceasefire amid growing concerns
The Washington administration is concerned that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will end the ceasefire in Gaza and restart the war.
Amid these concerns, US Vice President JD Vance has traveled to Israel, following visits from President Donald Trump’s Special Representative Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner.
The American delegation’s agenda includes both ensuring the continuation of the ceasefire and discussing the second phase of Trump’s Gaza plan. This second phase includes topics such as the deployment of an international force in Gaza and the disarmament of Hamas.
According to a report in the New York Times, concerns are growing among officials in Washington that Netanyahu will actively oppose the agreement.
The report predicts that US Vice President JD Vance and special representatives Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner will pressure Netanyahu not to undermine the agreement during their visit to Israel.
‘Risking the ceasefire is unacceptable’
According to a report by Israel-based Channel 12 television, citing sources, Witkoff and Kushner met with Netanyahu yesterday and urged him not to take any steps that could jeopardize the ceasefire.
The representatives reportedly told Netanyahu that it would be unacceptable for him to risk the ceasefire, even on the grounds of “self-defense.”
According to the report, the delegation said, “Do not act in a way that endangers the ceasefire. We want to do everything to reach the second phase.”
US Vice President JD Vance also arrived in Israel today with the same agenda.
It was stated that the visit will address “the completion of the first phase of the agreement to end the war in Gaza and the transition to the second phase.”
Preparations for the second phase have begun
Meanwhile, according to the newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth, Witkoff and Kushner met with the Head of the Military Intelligence Directorate, Shlomi Binder, and the Head of the Israel Defense Forces Planning Directorate, Eyal Harel, as part of their visit to Israel.
During the meeting, they discussed preparations for the second phase of the ceasefire plan, which includes the deployment of international forces in Gaza and the disarmament of Hamas.
Israeli officials expressed their concern about the tunnels that remain in large parts of the Gaza Strip and requested that international forces destroy them.
Witkoff and Kushner, in turn, conveyed a message from mediators Qatar, Türkiye, and Egypt to the Israeli side, stating that the incident in Rafah where two Israeli soldiers were killed was “not directed or coordinated by Hamas.”
In response, Israeli officials called for “accelerating efforts to recover the bodies of Israeli captives and for Hamas to fulfill its obligations and return the bodies.”
The report also noted that the reconstruction of Gaza is contingent on the return of all bodies and the disarmament of Hamas.
Talks with Türkiye to find the bodies
The New York Times report also noted that talks are underway with Türkiye to send a team of experts in body recovery to help find the missing bodies of captives in Gaza.
The report conveyed that Hamas claims to be having difficulty locating 15 individuals said to be in the Gaza Strip.
Following an explosion in Rafah, in southern Gaza, on October 19 that killed two Israeli soldiers, the Israeli army conducted airstrikes on various areas.
Hamas’s armed wing, the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades, announced that they are committed to the ceasefire and have no connection to the incident in Rafah.
Middle East
US lifts naval blockade of Iran after ceasefire memorandum signed
The United States has lifted its naval blockade of Iran on the orders of President Donald Trump, ending restrictions on vessels entering and leaving Iranian ports.
Announcing the development, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) said the US military was no longer blocking maritime traffic to Iranian ports and had halted all operations related to enforcing the naval blockade.
The statement added that US warships would remain in the region to monitor compliance with the terms of the agreement.
The decision to lift the blockade follows the memorandum of understanding signed by the United States and Iran on June 18, aimed at ending the war and reopening the Strait of Hormuz to maritime traffic.
After signing the document in France, where he was attending the G7 summit, Trump sent the agreement to Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian for approval.
In a statement, Iran’s Foreign Ministry said a formal signing ceremony between the two delegations, previously scheduled to take place in Geneva on June 19, would no longer be held.
Negotiations to continue in Switzerland
According to Axios, citing sources familiar with the matter, the signing process for the memorandum of understanding was accelerated in order to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to shipping as quickly as possible.
A planned meeting between US and Iranian representatives in Switzerland has not been cancelled. The talks are expected to focus on launching negotiations over Iran’s nuclear programme, with US Vice President James David Vance and Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf set to take part.
According to CNN, the 14-point memorandum calls for an immediate ceasefire on all fronts, the lifting of the naval blockade, the resumption of maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, the removal of oil sanctions on Iran and the withdrawal of US troops from areas surrounding Iran.
The agreement also includes the allocation of $300 billion for Iran’s economic reconstruction, the release of $24 billion in frozen Iranian assets and a 60-day negotiation process aimed at reaching a final agreement on the nuclear programme.
In return, the authorities in Tehran pledged not to develop nuclear weapons.
Middle East
US conducts covert ship-to-ship oil transfers in Strait of Hormuz, sources say
The United States is conducting a covert operation in the Strait of Hormuz to ensure the uninterrupted flow of oil shipments from the Persian Gulf, according to reports.
The US Armed Forces are secretly escorting tankers and conducting ship-to-ship oil transfers using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), unmanned surface vessels, and helicopters, Reuters reported, citing sources and satellite imagery.
At least 92 cargo vessels have participated in the process since the launch of the operation, the report said.
Sources stated that the plan is executed entirely and continuously under the control of the US military. According to the disclosed details, tankers arrive at a designated assembly point before reaching the Strait of Hormuz.
From there, they depart at staggered times, maintaining a distance of approximately 3 to 4 kilometers from one another. During the transit, the tankers switch off their transponders and extinguish their lights.
The US Armed Forces track the progress of the tankers via pre-determined routing points.
Once the tankers pass through the Strait of Hormuz and arrive just outside the zone that Iran has declared under its own control, they pull alongside receiving vessels to begin the oil transfer.
This transfer process reportedly lasts between 24 and 40 hours, after which the emptied tankers return back through the strait. Reuters noted that this method resembles the scheme used by Iran to bypass sanctions.
Oil transfers conducted in two distinct areas
Sources familiar with the process reported that the ship-to-ship oil transfers began in the early days of May and are being carried out in two distinct locations.
One of these points is located off the coast of Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), while the other is near the Port of Sohar in Oman.
Reuters reported that satellite imagery dated June 11 detected 17 pairs of vessels simultaneously conducting oil transfers across both areas.
Sources claimed that a US Air Force Apache-type helicopter, which was shot down by Iran on the evening of June 8 and triggered retaliatory strikes by Washington, was also involved in this covert mission.
Satellite imagery captured on the day of the incident showed six pairs of tankers positioned side-by-side off the coast of Sohar. When asked for comment on the matter, the US Department of Defense (Pentagon) maintained that assets of the US Central Command (CENTCOM) are in no way involved in activities providing protection to ship-to-ship oil transfer operations on the high seas.
According to shipping documents reviewed by Reuters, a significant portion of the oil transported in the operation consists of exports originating from the UAE.
Sources added that the Kuwait Oil Tanker Company, a firm owned by the Kuwaiti state, is also actively participating in these transfers.
The UAE government, the UAE state oil company ADNOC, and the Kuwait Oil Tanker Company have not yet made any statements regarding the matter.
In a report published on June 3, Bloomberg also wrote that after Washington suspended its initiative dubbed “Project Freedom,” which envisioned escorting vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, the US Navy continued to quietly assist the transit of ships through the strait while trying not to publicize these activities.
The Iran-based Mehr news agency announced on June 10 that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps had shot down a US MQ-9 Reaper-type unmanned aerial vehicle in the skies over the Iranian city of Jam.
On the evening of the same day, US President Donald Trump announced that he was preparing to resume bombardments against Iran due to insufficient progress in negotiations and the downing of the Apache helicopter off the coast of Oman on the evening of June 8.
CENTCOM announced on June 11 that the US military, acting on the instructions of President Donald Trump, had begun conducting “additional self-defense strikes” against certain targets in Iran.
Washington later desisted from launching new strikes, and Trump announced on June 15 that a peace agreement had been signed between the US and Iran.
Trump declared that the Strait of Hormuz was already partially open to maritime traffic and would be fully opened on June 19.
Middle East
Mine clearing in Strait of Hormuz could delay shipping traffic for up to 50 days
Clearing mines from the Strait of Hormuz to restore safe transit could delay the return of normal maritime traffic by several weeks, even after an agreement is reached to reopen the strategic waterway.
Security risks in the region persist, according to a report by the Reuters news agency, which cited shipping and maritime security sources.
Estimates from five Western sources operating in maritime security suggest that the clearance operation, which will utilize traditional minesweepers and underwater drones, could take 40 to 50 days to complete. Sources stated that this process must be concluded before insurance, shipping, and oil companies will be willing to risk transiting the strait.
The projected delay could impact global markets at a time when oil inventories in the world’s largest economies have fallen to their lowest levels since 2003. Based on pre-war shipment volumes, estimates suggest that tens of millions of additional barrels of oil could remain trapped in the strait, adding to the Persian Gulf shipments that have been blocked since February 28.
Jakob Larsen, the head of maritime safety and security at the shipping association BIMCO, called for caution regarding the situation:
“At this stage, we believe it is still too risky to begin transits. The mine hazard in the region remains a problem both now and for the future; therefore, safe, de-mined routes must be established.”
The report noted that the exact number of mines laid by Iran remains unknown in the strait, which accounted for 20% of global daily oil and natural gas shipments before the war. A June 11 briefing note from the German Navy, citing data from US and British naval forces, stated that the mines were located in four areas around the strait, though Germany noted it could not independently verify these locations.
The mere possibility of mines is highlighted as enough to keep shipping companies away from the region. Because a supertanker carrying crude oil can be valued at approximately $300 million, war-risk insurers, oil companies, and tanker operators are expected to demand guarantees of safe passage.
Rene Kofod-Olsen, CEO of V.Group—one of the world’s largest technical ship and crew management companies, which has 13 vessels stranded in the Persian Gulf—evaluated the situation:
“Even a single naval mine is enough to cause loss of life. This is clearly a massive problem for the global shipping industry.”
Arsenio Dominguez, Secretary-General of the UN’s International Maritime Organization, welcomed the agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, calling it “an important step toward restoring security in this vital corridor for seafarers and ships.” However, Dominguez added that “implementation will take time to ensure all necessary security and safety guarantees are met.”
Earlier, US President Donald Trump announced that an agreement had been signed with Iran, that the Strait of Hormuz was partially opened to maritime traffic, and that it would be fully opened as of June 19.
Trump claimed that, at the current stage, “a search is being conducted for a few mines.”
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