Live Updates: In Iran war, push to resume talks intensifies as U.S. blockade of Iran's ports enters Day 2
What to know about the Iran war today:
- Pakistan is attempting to arrange a second round of U.S.-Iran peace talks after last weekend's marathon session in Islamabad ended without an agreement. The war is now in its seventh week. A two-week truce is set to expire a week from today.
- Secretary of State Marco Rubio is set to take part in a meeting at the State Department today with the Lebanese and Israeli ambassadors to the U.S. in an effort to end fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, Iran's proxy in Lebanon, CBS News has confirmed. Hezbollah urged Lebanon to cancel the session.
- The U.S. blockade of Iran's ports is in its second day as Washington pressures Tehran to relinquish control of the Strait of Hormuz, the critical chokepoint for shipments of oil, fertilizer and other vital commodities. Iran is threatening to retaliate and has said no Gulf ports will be safe if the blockade continues.
Iran's interior minister orders border governors to counter maritime blockade threats
Iran's Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni said Tuesday that any attempts at sanctions or maritime blockade "will lead nowhere," Iranian state television reported.
Momeni instructed governors of border provinces to make full use of their delegated special powers to "neutralize the threat" of a maritime blockade and ensure that adversaries fail on this front as well.
No further details were provided on how provincial authorities are expected to counter or mitigate the blockade threat.
Israel says it wants "peace and normalization" with Lebanon ahead of talks in Washington
Israel's Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said his country is seeking "peace and normalization" with Lebanon, as the two countries prepared to meet later Tuesday in Washington for their first direct talks in decades.
"We want to reach peace and normalization with the state of Lebanon," Saar said at a press conference. "Israel and Lebanon don't have any major disputes between them. The problem is Hezbollah," the Iran-backed militant group whose opposition is dampening hopes of any breakthrough at the talks.
Israel's ongoing military campaign in Lebanon is threatening to derail the fragile US-Iranian ceasefire agreement announced a week ago.
Macron calls for resumption of U.S.-Iran ceasefire talks
French President Emmanuel Macron said he spoke with President Trump and Iranian President Massoud Pezeshkian on Monday, and "urged the resumption of the negotiations suspended in Islamabad, the clearing up of misunderstandings, and the avoidance of any further escalation."
In a social media post, Macron said he deemed it essential for the ceasefire to include Lebanon and for the Strait of Hormuz to be reopened unconditionally.
"Under these conditions, negotiations should be able to resume quickly, with the support of the key parties concerned," Macron said.
Macron said France and the U.K. would host a conference in Paris on Friday for "non-belligerent countries ready to contribute, alongside us, to a multilateral and purely defensive mission aimed at restoring freedom of navigation in the strait when security conditions allow."
"The Islamic Republic of Iran is ready to continue talks solely within the framework of international laws and regulations and with the aim of protecting the rights of the Iranian people. And Europe can play a constructive role in encouraging the United States to adhere to these frameworks," Pezeshkian told Macron, according to an Iranian readout of the call.
Israel says 10 soldiers wounded in fighting in key Lebanese town
The Israeli military said Tuesday that overnight clashes between Israeli soldiers and Hezbollah militants left 10 soldiers wounded in the strategically significant southern Lebanese town of Bint Jbeil, which Israeli forces have encircled.
The escalation of fighting in the town comes as Israeli and Lebanese officials were to hold talks in Washington Tuesday aimed at ending the war.
According to the military, Israeli troops have now fully surrounded the town, marking a notable advance in their ongoing ground offensive in southern Lebanon.
On Monday, the military said its forces killed more than 100 Hezbollah fighters in and around the town over the past few days.
Just three miles from the Israeli border, Bint Jbeil has long been both a symbolic and strategic flashpoint in confrontations between Israeli forces and Hezbollah.
The Israeli military also said Tuesday that a soldier had been killed in combat in southern Lebanon, the first since a U.S.-Iran truce went into effect -- a truce that Israel insists doesn't include the country where it's fighting Tehran-backed Hezbollah.
CBS/AFP
Iran says war reparations among issues raised in talks with U.S. in Islamabad
Iranian government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani told Russian media that one of the topics discussed in talks with the United States in Islamabad last weekend was the issue of war reparations, Iran's state news agency IRNA reports.
She said Iranian economic officials are assessing the extent of the damage from attacks, noting that losses must be evaluated on multiple levels.
According to Mohajrani, some damage is the physical destruction of buildings while other damage stems from the shutdown or disruption of oil and petrochemical production facilities.
Iran has been charging vessels it lets through the Strait of Hormuz a fee as one way of raising revenue.
But now the U.S. is blockading traffic through the strait that comes from Iranian ports, effectively cutting off both oil revenue and transit income.
Iran-linked vessels appear to transit Strait of Hormuz despite U.S. blockade, tracking data shows
Tracking data appears to show a number of Iran-linked ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz in the hours after the U.S. blockade of the waterway began on Monday.
The U.S. military said its blockade would apply to "all maritime traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports," but that it would "not impede freedom of navigation for vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz to and from non-Iranian ports."
One ship that crossed the strait after the blockade began on Monday - the Christianna - had previously been stopped at the Iranian port of Bandar Imam Khomeini, data shows.
Another ship, the Ladonna, had been at Bandar Imam Khomeini for a week before turning on its transponder Tuesday and journeying into the Persian Gulf.
The Murlikishan, which is under U.S. sanctions over its connections to Iran, journeyed west through the strait overnight, tracking data shows, along with another tanker, the Peace Gulf, which is not sanctioned by the U.S. but made a port call in Iran in December 2025.
The Rich Starry, a tanker that is sanctioned by the United States under a different name, sailed through the strait overnight Monday, while the Elpis, another sanctioned tanker, sailed through the strait after the blockade began, having apparently come from the Iranian port of Bushehr, according to tracking data.
CBS News cannot confirm that the ships have not been broadcasting false location reports - called spoofing - to conceal their true whereabouts.
Vance says "ball is in the Iranian court"
Vice President JD Vance told Fox News in an interview Monday that the U.S. made its red lines clear in talks with Iran, and that it's now up to Tehran to take action.
"I really think the ball is in the Iranian court, because we put a lot on the table. We actually made very clear what our red lines were," Vance said.
Vance said the U.S. is willing to be accommodating, but Iran cannot have the ability to enrich uranium and that the "nuclear dust" needs to be removed from Iran, preferably by the U.S. Another red line is nuclear weapons, the vice president said.
"It's one thing for the Iranians to say that they're not going to have a nuclear weapon. It's another thing for us to put in place the mechanism to ensure that's not going to happen," Vance said.
On the Strait of Hormuz, Vance said there's been an "uptick in traffic coming through the strait," but that it hasn't been fully reopened. The vice president added that if the Iranians don't make progress on the vital waterway, it will "change the negotiation."
Vance also said Iran "tried to move the goalposts" on the strait during the talks in Pakistan. He said the U.S. now has the cards, militarily and economically, in the Strait of Hormuz, and it's up to the Iranians to decide how they're going to move forward.
CBS/AFP
Rubio to participate in Israel-Lebanon talks Tuesday
Secretary of State Marco Rubio will be participating in the Israel-Lebanon talks that are scheduled to be held Tuesday in Washington, D.C., CBS News has confirmed.
The Israeli and Lebanese governments are engaging in direct, high-level diplomatic talks – the first such talks since 1993 – brokered by the U.S., a State Department official said.
CBS News previously reported on this upcoming meeting, with two sources familiar with the matter and one Lebanese official saying they'll be led by U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon Michel Issa along with Lebanese Ambassador Nada Hamadeh Moawad and Israeli Ambassador Yechiel Leiter. The State Department official told CBS News Monday that Issa, Leiter and Hamadeh would be participants in tomorrow's meeting.
Shortly after Israel and the U.S. began the war with Iran, Hezbollah fired rockets into Israel in a show of solidarity with Tehran. Israel then launched a new offensive against Hezbollah, and invaded much of southern Lebanon.
The White House and Israel's government say Lebanon was never part of the two-week ceasefire with Iran announced last week.
Hezbollah's leader urges Lebanon to cancel Israel talks in Washington
Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem on Monday urged Lebanon to cancel a planned meeting with Israel in Washington, reiterating his group's rejection of direct negotiations with Israel.
"We call for a historic and heroic stance by canceling this negotiating meeting," Qassem, whose Iran-backed terrorist group has been at war with Israel since March 2, said in a televised address.
The Lebanese and Israeli ambassadors to the United States are scheduled to meet on Tuesday.
U.S. blockade of Iran ports threatens already crippled oil supply
Washington's decision to blockade Iranian ports on the Strait of Hormuz is sending tremors through global energy markets, raising fears of a fresh oil shock by threatening supplies to Asia.
Iran had continued to pump crude to Asia since the start of the Middle East war, partly shielded by its elusive "dark fleet."
Roughly one-fifth of the world's oil normally flows through the vital waterway. Iran has already tightened the screws in recent weeks, sharply slowing maritime traffic.
Now, the blockade of Iran's ports ordered Sunday by President Trump threatens to land another blow to global oil and gas supplies after the fighting damaged energy facilities in the Gulf states and blocked their exports through the strait, said Amir Handjani of the U.S.-based Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft.
Just days after launching the war against Iran along with Israel on Feb. 28, the U.S. temporarily eased some sanctions on Tehran to prevent an abrupt energy shock — particularly for Asian economies.
Iranian crude had been helping to meet demand so far, Handjani told AFP, but he warned that the blockade now threatens that fragile balance.
"What is the U.S. Navy going to do? They're not going to confront Chinese, Indian and Pakistani merchant ships" loading in Iranian ports, he said. "That's an act of war."
China remains the world's largest importer of Iranian crude, and on Tuesday Beijing called the U.S. blockade "dangerous and irresponsible."
Oil prices, already climbing, will continue to surge, Handjani predicted.
Russia's oil export revenues nearly doubled during Iran war, IEA reports
Russia nearly doubled its earnings from oil exports in March as Moscow was granted sanctions relief in a bid to offset soaring energy prices during the war in the Middle East, the International Energy Agency said Tuesday.
The country earned $19 billion last month as crude and oil product exports rose to 7.1 million barrels per day, an increase of 320 thousand barrels a day from February levels.
The United States eased some restrictions on sales of Russian crude imposed over its war against Ukraine, allowing countries to purchase oil that was already at sea until April 11.
Trump tells CBS News Pope Leo should stay out of politics following Iran war criticism
President Trump told CBS News senior correspondent Norah O'Donnell on Monday that Pope Leo is "wrong on the issues" after previously lashing out at the pontiff late Sunday, calling him "WEAK on Crime, and terrible for Foreign Policy" in a lengthy Truth Social post.
In a phone interview, Mr. Trump confirmed that he had watched "60 Minutes," which highlighted Pope Leo's disapproval of mass deportations and the Iran war, before firing off the post. When asked if he plans to call the pope directly, Mr. Trump gave a firm "no."
"He's wrong on the issues," Mr. Trump said of Pope Leo. "I don't think he should be getting into politics. I think he probably learned that from this."
Mr. Trump also said he wasn't sure whether Pope Leo, the first U.S.-born pontiff, would visit the U.S. during his presidency. "I have no idea," he said. "It's up to him, not up to me."
-Keith Sharman, Callie Teitelbaum, Roxanne Feitel
