
Strait of Hormuz 'Completely Open' Until Ceasefire's End as Trump Celebrates Tumbling Oil Prices
President Donald Trump and Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi jointly announced on Friday, April 17, that the Strait of Hormuz is now completely open to all commercial shipping, though the US blockade on Iranian ports will remain in full force until a war-ending deal is reached. Araghchi posted that in line with the ceasefire in Lebanon, passage for all commercial vessels through the strait is declared completely open for the remaining period of the ceasefire. The Israel-Lebanon ceasefire went into effect on Friday and is scheduled to last 10 days.
Trump took to Truth Social to tout the news and pushed the announcement further, declaring that the reopening of the critical chokepoint, which carries 20 percent of the world's oil, would be permanent. He wrote that Iran has agreed to never close the Strait of Hormuz again, and that the waterway will no longer be used as a weapon against the world. Trump also clarified that the reopening means all sea mines will be removed, noting that Iran, with the help of the United States, has removed or is removing the explosives it had littered throughout the passage during the war.
The commander-in-chief stressed that the American naval blockade on Iranian ships and ports will remain until Tehran cuts a deal with Washington, preserving critical leverage to pull the theocratic regime to the negotiating table. Araghchi emphasized that the strait is open only on a coordinated route approved by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and a senior Iranian official added that all commercial sail plans must be cleared with the IRGC while military vessels remain prohibited. The US-Iran ceasefire is set to expire Tuesday, April 21, and mediator Pakistan is working to arrange a second round of talks in Islamabad before the clock runs out.
(NYP/VFI News)