Iran and the US disagree on the peace — and 11,000 sailors are stuck in Hormuz
The deal to end the war is in force, but Tehran and Washington tell different stories about nuclear inspections. Meanwhile, the strait evacuation begins.
The war has stopped; the peace is still being negotiated on camera. Iran and the United States signed a memorandum to wind down the conflict that also drew in Israel, but this week each side is telling its own version of what was actually agreed — especially on the nuclear file.
The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency says his inspectors will be allowed to visit Iranian facilities. Tehran counters that the sites hit by the bombing aren’t on the list, and Iran’s president made clear that capping the missile programme will never be part of any deal. Translation: the ceasefire holds, but the fine print is a minefield.
There’s a very concrete, human side too. The UN’s International Maritime Organization has begun evacuating more than 11,000 sailors stranded in the Strait of Hormuz during the conflict — people stuck aboard while the diplomacy sorted out the rest.
Why it matters here
Hormuz is the tap through which much of the world’s oil flows. When that region calms down, markets breathe easier and fuel prices tend to ease — something you notice, sooner or later, at the pump in Portugal.
Image: Wikimedia Commons