Trump claims to have opened Strait of Hormuz as mediators push new US-Iran talks

Trump claims ‘opening’ Strait of Hormuz as mediators push new US-Iran talks: What we know so far
RT
April 15,2026

US President Donald Trump has said he is “permanently opening” the Strait of Hormuz, presenting the move as benefiting “China and the world” after claiming Beijing agreed “not to send weapons to Iran.” Trump’s remarks come as the US military claims American warships have effectively blocked Iranian trade through the vital waterway.

Iran’s army has warned it could target marine traffic in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman, and the Red Sea if the blockade of its ports continues. Tehran insists it does not want war or instability but will not bow to pressure or surrender.

The escalation is unfolding amid reports of ongoing indirect contacts over a possible second round of US‑Iran talks, following last weekend’s negotiations in Pakistan that ended without an agreement to halt the war launched by Washington and Israel in late February.

 

What is actually happening at sea?

Traffic through Hormuz, a key global trade route, remains effectively disrupted as the US enforces a blockade of Iranian ports.

US Central Command (CENTCOM) says the measures apply to vessels of all nations entering or exiting Iranian ports in the Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman, while insisting that freedom of navigation

Tehran says it will not return to the pre‑war status of the strait and is drafting new rules for ships from countries that imposed sanctions on Iran or supported the US-Israeli attacks to pay a toll as compensation to transit the waterway.

Analysts at energy consulting firm Gelber & Associates, cited by Reuters, say tracking data shows “a small but increasing number of tankers moving” through Hormuz, although “overall traffic remains sharply below normal levels.”

Fars ⁠News Agency reported that two Iranian vessels transited the strait on Wednesday, including a supertanker that entered Iranian waters via the open sea with its transponder on and another ship carrying food supplies bound for Imam Khomeini port.

 

How is each side portraying the situation? 

Trump has portrayed the latest moves as a success, declaring on Truth Social that the strait is “permanently opened” and that China is “very happy.” He also claimed Beijing had “agreed not to send weapons to Iran.” China has not publicly responded and has previously denied providing military support to Tehran. US officials say the measures are intended to pressure Iran while keeping international shipping routes open.

Iran earlier announced it was closing the Strait of Hormuz to “enemy ships” in response to the US-Israeli bombing campaign and has demanded recognition of its “sovereignty” over the waterway and the right to impose tolls. President Masoud Pezeshkian said Tehran does not seek war or instability and remains committed to dialogue, but warned that any attempt to force the country into surrender is doomed to fail and will not be accepted by the Iranian nation.

How are markets reacting? 

Oil prices have edged higher as concerns over disruptions in Hormuz – which carries about 20% of global oil and LNG shipments – offset hopes of easing tensions.

Brent crude traded near $95 per barrel on Wednesday, with expectations for renewed talks helping cap gains below $100 even as traders remained focused on supply risks in the Middle East. Gelber & Associates said traders are no longer pricing in a full‑scale outage, but are still maintaining a “residual premium” as flows recover unevenly rather than returning to normal.

Broader economic worries are also mounting. The International Monetary Fund has warned the conflict could weigh on global growth, while Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee told the Financial Times that higher oil prices risk pushing up US inflation expectations, describing a “double danger” from the Iran stand‑off and existing trade tensions.

Equity markets, however, have so far taken a more upbeat view, with major Asian indices rising on hopes diplomacy will avert a prolonged disruption to Gulf energy supplies.

What is Moscow saying? 

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has warned against further escalation, expressing hope that the US “will be realists… and will not continue the unprovoked aggression” against Tehran, which he said risks destabilizing the wider Middle East.

 At the same time, he signaled Moscow is prepared to offset potential supply shocks, saying Russia “can certainly make up for resource shortages faced by China and other countries” if Iranian exports are squeezed and is ready to work with partners “on an equal and mutually beneficial basis.”

What will happen next? 

While Trump says the war could end soon, promising an “amazing two days,” diplomatic efforts appear to be gathering pace.

Officials from Pakistan, Iran, and several Gulf states say negotiating teams from Washington and Tehran could return to Islamabad later this week. A key Pakistani mediator reportedly arrived in Tehran on Wednesday with a message from the US and is expected to discuss preparations for a second round of talks.

The US and Iran agreed to a two‑week ceasefire last week, raising hopes for a broader settlement, but both sides have since traded accusations over “unacceptable” demands. Washington has not formally committed to extending the truce beyond its current expiry date, a senior US official told CNN.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/638461-trump-iran-hormuz-peace-talks/

Pakistan Foreign Minister Delivers US Message in Tehran About New Round of Talks

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi welcomes Pakistani Army Chief Field Marshall Asim Munir heading a diplomatic delegation in Iran on April 15, 2026. (Photo: Iran’s Foreign Ministry)

Press TV
April 15, 2026
[…]

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi received Munir, who is heading a high-level political-security delegation, at a formal meeting shortly after he arrived in Tehran to deliver a message from Washington.

The delegation includes representatives from Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry, security institutions and technical experts.

[…]

The purpose of the Pakistani delegation’s visit is to deliver a US message to the Iranian leadership and to plan the next round of negotiations.

The arrival of Pakistan’s top military official underscores Islamabad’s growing role as a key mediator between Tehran and Washington.

Earlier on Wednesday, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei confirmed that Tehran would host a Pakistani delegation, adding that indirect exchanges of messages between Iran and the United States continue.

“Following the talks that took place in Islamabad, and also the discussions that the Pakistani side has had with the United States, our views have been conveyed and heard,” Baghaei said.

“Naturally, during this visit, the two sides are expected to discuss their viewpoints in detail.”

The diplomatic push comes as a two-week ceasefire between Iran and the United States, brokered by Pakistan, remains in effect.

The Munir-led delegation is expected to discuss the framework for a possible second round of talks between Tehran and Washington, with Islamabad emerging as the likely venue. The first round of talks in Islamabad failed to produce an agreement over the weekend.

The truce took effect after 40 days of fighting that began on February 28, when the United States and Israel launched an unprovoked war of aggression against Iran.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/04/15/766938/Pakistan%E2%80%99s-Army-chief-Asim-Munir-arrives-in-Tehran-to-deliver-US-message

UAE VP calls Iran’s Parliament speaker to discuss regional de-escalation

Speaker of Iran’s Parliament Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf (L) and UAE Vice President and Deputy Prime Minister Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan

Press TV

Senior Iranian and Emirati officials have exchanged viewpoints about ways to de-escalate tensions in West Asia, the first high-status negotiations between the two Persian Gulf states since the illegal, imposed US-Israeli war on Iran in late February.

On Wednesday, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) Vice President and Deputy Prime Minister Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan held a phone call with Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, Speaker of the Parliament of the Islamic Republic of Iran, according to a statement released by the official Emirati WAM news agency.

The two sides “discussed regional developments and ways to de-escalate tensions in the region.”

Abu Dhabi has adopted a hawkish approach towards Tehran since February 28, recalling its ambassador and shuttering down its diplomatic mission after Iranian Armed Forces carried out waves of retaliatory missile and drone operations against US interests across the region and Israeli targets in the occupied territories.

The UAE was a key ally of the US and Israeli aggressors in the Persian Gulf region, providing them with access to its bases and soil for attacks on the Islamic Republic.

Iranian armed forces struck US bases in the Persian Gulf state. Some industrial sites, linked to the US, were also hit after key Iranian infrastructure was attacked.

The United States and Israel initiated the illegal war on February 28, following the assassination of Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei and several high-ranking military commanders.

In response, Iranian armed forces executed 100 waves of decisive strikes over 40 days, targeting US and Israeli military assets which resulted in significant damage.

A two-week ceasefire was brokered on April 8, allowing for negotiations in Islamabad, where Iran proposed a ten-point plan seeking the withdrawal of US troops and the lifting of sanctions.

Despite 21 hours of intensive talks, the Iranian delegation returned to Tehran without an agreement. There was a lack of trust in US commitments.

Donald Trump, the president of the United States, recently announced a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, aimed at intercepting vessels that had paid tolls to Iran. The US military confirmed that the blockade began at 1400 GMT on April 13.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/04/15/766940/Authorities-from-UAE-talk-to-Iran-on-West-Asia-de-escalation

 

China to Ignore Trump Blockade: The Strait Remains Open to Us

president donald trump greets chinese president xi jinping before a bilateral meeting at the gimhae international airport terminal (54890669668) (1)

President Donald Trump greets Chinese President Xi Jinping before a bilateral meeting at the Gimhae International Airport terminal, Thursday, October 30, 2025, in Busan, South Korea. (Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok)

Kyle Anzalone

April 13, 2026

China said it will not comply with the Strait of Hormuz blockade that President Donald Trump imposed on Monday. Beijing explained that it is negotiating with Tehran to transit the waterway and expects other countries not to meddle in its affairs.

Beijing is “monitoring the situation in the Middle East. Our ships are moving in and out of the waters of the Strait of Hormuz,” Chinese Defense Minister, Adm. Dong Jun, said after Trump announced the blockade. “We have trade and energy agreements with Iran. We will respect and honor them and expect others to not meddle in our affairs. Iran controls the Strait of Hormuz, and it is open for us.”

In response to a US and Israeli surprise attack on February 28, Tehran took control of the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has allowed only vessels from “friendly nations” to enter or exit the Persian Gulf and has imposed a toll. China is among the nations that have worked out deals with Iran to allow its ships to transit the Strait.

Iran says the Strait of Hormuz is now under Tehran’s control, and plans to change the toll to transit the waterway after the conflict ends.

Trump has threatened that the US will stop any ship that exits the Gulf after paying a toll to Tehran, setting up a potential confrontation with Beijing if the Navy attempts to seize a Chinese-flagged tanker.

Trump is scheduled to visit China next month to meet with President  Xi.  Earlier this week, the President threatened to place a 50% tariff on China if Beijing provides military support to Iran.

[…]

Via https://libertarianinstitute.org/news/china-to-ignore-trumps-blockade-the-strait-remains-open-to-us/

Epic battle of Bint Jbeil: Hezbollah fighters stand their ground

Hezbollah fighters Oct 2023 AP

Al Mayadeen English

Heavy confrontations are ongoing between Lebanese Resistance fighters and Israeli occupation forces on the outskirts of the old market area in the southern town of Bint Jbeil, according to Al Mayadeen’s correspondent in southern Lebanon.

The correspondent described the fighting as intense, stating that Resistance fighters in Bint Jbeil are engaged in close-quarters combat with elite Israeli units. The report portrayed the confrontation as a fierce and sustained battle amid ongoing military pressure.

Despite continued airstrikes, artillery shelling, and a siege of the area, Israeli forces have so far failed to achieve any significant breakthrough in Bint Jbeil, with field reports indicating that Israeli troops have not yet reached key positions inside the town, including the municipal stadium, a symbolic site from which martyr Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah declared that “Israel” is “frailer than a spider’s web” following the liberation of South Lebanon on May 25, 2000.

Rising casualties

Israeli media reported that the commander of Battalion 52 was seriously injured today in battles in Bint Jbeil, southern Lebanon.

Moreover, a very large number of wounded Israeli occupation soldiers are suffering from limb injuries from battles in Lebanon, along with other types of injuries.

Throughout the day, Israeli army helicopters have been landing at hospitals carrying wounded soldiers from the front in Lebanon, Israeli media reported.

Earlier today, Israeli media reported that 10 soldiers from Battalion 101 of the Paratroopers Brigade were wounded overnight during close-quarters combat with Islamic Resistance fighters within the town.

According to the same sources, three of the wounded soldiers are in critical condition. The casualties were evacuated to hospitals, with some transported urgently by military helicopters while others were transferred by ground.

Bint Jbeil, the capital of resistance in South Lebanon

Bint Jbeil, a key city in southern Lebanon near the Israeli border, holds significant strategic importance due to its location overlooking multiple access routes into the border region.

Bint Jbeil overlooks key routes linking Maroun al-Ras to Tebnine, forming a main north–south corridor between the border and inland areas. It also connects westward to Aitaroun and Rmeish along roads running parallel to the frontier.

To the northeast, it links into the wider road network toward Tyre, making it an important logistics and movement hub. Its elevated terrain also provides oversight of nearby cross-border approach routes, enhancing its strategic value.

Control of the town provides operational depth and influence over nearby villages, making it a recurring focal point in confrontations between Israeli forces and Lebanese resistance groups.

Strategic weight

Beyond its military relevance, Bint Jbeil carries strong symbolic weight. It has long been referred to as the “capital of the Resistance,” reflecting its role in shaping narratives of defiance and resilience.

Historically, Bint Jbeil’s association with resistance dates back to the French Mandate period. On June 11, 1936, protests erupted in the town during what became known as the tobacco revolt, after French forces opened fire on demonstrators. The incident marked an early chapter in the town’s legacy of organized opposition.

During the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon from June 6, 1982, to May 24, 2000, Bint Jbeil became a central site of armed resistance activity. The town witnessed repeated operations against Israeli forces and their allies, reinforcing its position as a stronghold for resistance operations in the region.

Additionally, the town’s municipality stadium, a center of focus in the current battles, bore witness to martyr Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah’s May 25, 2000 speech, in which he declared “Israel” to be “frailer than a spider’s web” following the expulsion of Israeli forces from southern Lebanon and ending its occupation.

The town’s modern symbolic status was cemented during the July 2006 war, particularly in the Battle of Bint Jbeil, where intense fighting took place between Israeli troops and Hezbollah fighters. The confrontation became one of the most high-profile engagements of the war and was widely portrayed as a defining moment by both sides.

Today, Bint Jbeil remains both a strategic objective and a symbolic prize in any escalation along the Lebanon-“Israel” frontier. Its history, geography, and political significance continue to ensure its central role in ongoing tensions in the region.

Indonesia Agrees to Receive Oil, Gas Supplies From Russia – Indonesian Energy Ministry

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Indonesian counterpart Prabowo Subianto - Sputnik International, 1920, 14.04.2026

Sputnik

JAKARTA – Indonesia has secured agreements on the supply of crude oil, fuel and liquefied petroleum gas from Russia, Indonesian Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources Bahlil Lahadalia said on Tuesday.

“We will be able to increase our crude oil reserves. In addition, we will have the opportunity to receive liquefied petroleum gas… The Russian side declared its readiness to support Indonesia’s energy security, including oil and gas supplies, as well as the development of storage systems,” the minister said following talks in Moscow.

The results of the negotiations send a positive signal to strengthen Indonesia’s energy sustainability “against the backdrop of an unstable global situation,” the minister said, noting that the partnership with Russia could “become an important option, given the scale of its energy production and experience in the oil and gas industry.”

[…]

Via https://sputnikglobe.com/20260414/indonesia-agrees-to-receive-oil-gas-supplies-from-russia—indonesian-energy-ministry-1123986579.html

Ships leave Iranian ports in Persian Gulf despite US ‘blockade’

File photo shows Iranian speedboats patrolling Persian Gulf waters.

RT

April 14, 2026

At least two ships sailing from Iranian ports crossed the Strait of Hormuz despite a blockade threat by the US military, maritime tracking reports have indicated.

The ships were among at least four Iran-linked vessels that used the route after Washington’s threat, according to maritime data provider Kpler.

The Liberia-flagged bulk carrier Christianna crossed after unloading 74,000 tons of corn at the Iranian port of Bandar Imam Khomeini, passing Iran’s Larak Island in the strait around 1600 GMT on April 13, Kpler data showed.

A second ship, the Comoros-flagged tanker Elpis, was near Larak Island around 1100 GMT and cleared the strait about 1600 GMT. It was loaded with 31,000 tons of methanol, having left the Iranian port of Bushehr on March 31, Kpler data showed.

The US Central Command (CENTCOM) had threatened the blockade would target “vessels of all nations entering or departing Iranian ports and coastal areas”.

A Chinese tanker, the Rich Starry, also crossed the Strait overnight via the Iranian-approved vetting route south of Larak Island.

Maritime analysts have cautioned that signals from ships in the region have been disrupted and manipulated, making precise tracking difficult.

Iran imposed restrictions on the passage of vessels in the Strait following the illegal US-Israeli war of aggression on February 28.

The administration of Donald Trump said over the weekend it would impose a blockade on Iranian ports in the Persian Gulf and Sea of Oman. The US military claimed the blockade took effect on Monday.

The IRGC warned that any military vessels approaching the Strait of Hormuz would breach a fragile ceasefire that halted 40 days of intense fighting last week. Iran’s central military command also warned of a broader regional response if Iranian ports come under attack.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/04/14/766870/Ships-leave-Iranian-ports-in-Persian-Gulf-despite-US-blockade-Data


Vance claims US has achieved Iran goals

Vance claims US has achieved Iran goals

RT

April 14, 2026

The US has achieved its objectives in Iran, Vice President J.D. Vance has claimed, adding Washington could begin winding down its military operation against the Islamic Republic.

In a Fox News interview on Monday, after US negotiators left talks in Pakistan without securing an agreement to end the conflict, Vance said Washington had made “a lot of progress” in the negotiations, adding that “the ball is in Iran’s court” on whether to move forward.

“I do think that we’re in a place where we’ve accomplished our objectives. We can start to wind this thing down. I’d much rather wind this thing down with a big successful negotiation,” he said.

According to Vance the talks at the weekend in Islamabad “did make some progress,” particularly on US demands for the removal of nuclear material from Iran and measures to prevent future uranium enrichment. “They moved in our direction,” he claimed.

He suggested that Iranian negotiators were “unable to cut a deal” without sign-off from other authorities and returned to Tehran to seek approval for US terms.

“Whether we have further conversations, whether we ultimately get to a deal, I really think the ball is in the Iranian court,” Vance said.

He added that if US “red lines” on Iran’s nuclear program are met, “then this can be a very, very good deal for both countries.”

The comments came hours after the US began blocking ships at Iranian ports in the Strait of Hormuz, a move President Donald Trump said was meant to force Tehran back to talks and reopen the vital oil artery, the disruption of which has sent energy prices skyrocketing.

Meanwhile, Tehran has signaled doubt, insisting that Washington should accept its terms or face a stalemate, Ebrahim Azizi, the head of the Iranian Parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee, told RT on Sunday. He added that the US needs a deal “more than we do,” and that many Iranians are unhappy that Tehran even entered into negotiations.

“When they need it, they should accept both the conditions and the prerequisites. If they don’t, we’ll do our work and go our own way. Nothing will change,” he insisted.

Tehran remains deeply skeptical of Washington’s intentions, even after ceasefire-related preconditions were discussed, Azizi said. “We simply do not trust them,” he added, questioning whether a country that “elevates arrogance and colonialism to a guiding principle” can be relied on to honor its commitments.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/638415-us-accomplish-iran-goal-vance/

Iran-Pakistan transit corridor begins operations with first export shipment

Iran-Pakistan transit corridor begins operations with first export shipment

Press TV

Trade activity through the newly launched Pakistan-Iran transit corridor has officially started, marked by the dispatch of the first export consignment from Pakistan.

Director Transit Trade Customs Sanaullah Abro told The Express Tribune that the maiden shipment — frozen meat — was sent to Tashkent, Uzbekistan, using refrigerated trucks.

He noted that under the new arrangement, goods from Pakistan will move through Gwadar, cross into Iran, and then proceed toward Central Asian destinations.

Abro said the launch of the corridor is expected to stimulate Pakistan’s economic growth and boost freight movement through the country’s ports.

According to the Directorate of Transit Trade Customs, the corridor operates under the TIR (Transports Internationaux Routiers) system.

To facilitate this, authorities have streamlined TIR procedures and activated major border points, including Taftan, Rimdan, Sost, and Gwadar.

Officials describe the Iran-Pakistan transit corridor as an important advancement for Pakistan’s trade and transit sectors, with the potential to expand exports and strengthen regional connectivity.

Sources added that the route will offer Pakistan a cost-efficient alternative to maritime trade, reducing transport times and significantly cutting logistics expenses.

At an inauguration ceremony, Abro and Director Transit Muhammad Rashid formally flagged off the first consignment.

Meanwhile, optimism is growing that Iran and Pakistan might revive their long-stalled gas and oil pipeline projects following recent peace talks between Iran and the United States.

Iran and Pakistan signed a commercial agreement in 2009 during the PPP government, and the gas pipeline was jointly inaugurated in 2013 by former Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and former Pakistani president Asif Ali Zardari.

While Iran has completed its part of the pipeline, Pakistan has yet to begin construction.

Officials say Iran is open to extending the gas sale agreement by 10 years, but Pakistan remains reluctant due to US sanctions and reduced domestic gas demand.

Pakistan has explored several alternative plans over the years, including an LNG pipeline from Gwadar with an additional 80-km stretch to the Iranian border.

A Chinese firm showed interest in the project, but international sanctions have continued to impede progress.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/04/13/766776/Iran-Pakistan-transit-corridor-begins-operations-with-first-export-shipment

With US Making Messes, China Making Moves

By John Leake and Shanaka Anslem Perera
April 13, 2026

JUST IN: While every camera in the world is pointed at the Serena Hotel in Islamabad today, Xi Jinping shook hands with KMT Chairwoman Cheng Li-wun at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. The first high-level KMT-CCP leadership meeting in nearly a decade. Xi told her: “Compatriots on both sides of the strait are all Chinese, one family.” He added: “Taiwan independence is the chief culprit undermining peace.” Cheng called her six-day trip a “journey for peace” and invoked the 1992 Consensus.

This did not happen by accident. It happened today.

The Iran war pulled American military assets out of the Pacific. Carriers, Marines, THAAD, Patriots, all redeployed to the Middle East since February 28. Brookings explicitly identified this as “strategic space” for Beijing. China then used its leverage over Iran (1.5 million barrels per day, Tehran’s largest customer) to nudge Tehran toward the ceasefire. Trump confirmed: “I heard yes” when asked if China persuaded Iran. The ceasefire was the entrance fee for the May 14-15 Beijing summit. Today’s KMT meeting is the pre-summit positioning play.

The sequence is architectural. China vetoed the UN Hormuz resolution on April 7 (preserving Iran’s leverage and its own intermediary status). China nudged Iran toward the bilateral ceasefire the same day (building goodwill with Trump). China scheduled the Xi-Cheng meeting for April 10 (the day Islamabad talks begin, when US attention is maximally diverted). And the May summit sits five weeks away, where Taiwan language will be tested in a room where China arrives with three diplomatic receipts: we helped you get the ceasefire, we kept the KMT dialogue alive, and we are the only power that can deliver Iran.

Meanwhile, the KMT-controlled legislature has stalled Taiwan’s $40 billion special defense budget for asymmetric capabilities. The same party whose chairwoman is shaking Xi’s hand today is the party blocking the weapons purchases Washington needs Taiwan to make to sustain the First Island Chain deterrence strategy that underpins US containment of China. Bloomberg reported that Beijing will “use the sit down to argue that Taiwanese people are in favor of closer ties, sending a key signal to the US.” The New York Times said Xi is using the meeting “to cast Beijing as a peacemaker and squeeze the island’s president.”

Taiwan produces over 90 percent of the world’s most advanced semiconductors. TSMC commands 72 percent of the global foundry market. A full conflict over Taiwan would erase $10.6 trillion in global GDP in year one. This is not a sideshow. This is the main event wearing a mask.

Trump is a transactional president. He has already shown willingness to use allies as leverage (NATO “freeloaders,” Greenland, Panama Canal). China is betting that a president who just watched his NATO allies refuse to join the Iran war, who needs rare-earth supply chains for AI and defense, who wants a trade deal before midterms, will be receptive to a framing in which Taiwan is “handled” through dialogue rather than deterrence.

The Islamabad talks are about Iran. The Beijing handshake is about everything else. And the country that brokered the ceasefire, blocked the UN vote, moved its tankers freely through a closed strait, and met the opposition leader of America’s most strategically vital partner all did it in the same week.

The real negotiation is not at the Serena Hotel. It is already underway at the Great Hall of the People.

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/us-making-messes-china-making-moves/5921974