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A handout photo released by US Central Command on April 18 shows AH-64 Apaches flying above the Strait of Hormuz during a patrol on April 17.
A handout photo released by US Central Command on April 18 shows AH-64 Apaches flying above the Strait of Hormuz during a patrol on April 17.

live Iran Claims It Forced 2 Tankers To Change Course In Hormuz Strait

As the US-Israeli war with Iran continues to impact and shape the region, journalists from RFE/RL deliver ongoing updates and analysis.

Key Takeaways:

  • Iran's powerful parliament speaker and lead negotiator said that "we have had progress" in talks with Washington but that there is "still a big difference between us."
  • Iran’s armed forces reportedly turned back two tankers attempting to transit the Strait of Hormuz on April 19 after issuing warnings.
  • Amid an ongoing US blockade of Iranian ports, the naval forces of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps warned late on April 18 that any vessel approaching the Strait of Hormuz would be treated as a target.
  • Iran's state-funded Foundation of Martyrs and Veterans Affairs says that more than 3,400 people were killed in the country during the war with the United States and Israel.
  • The brother of jailed Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi has told RFE/RL's Radio Farda that her life is "in serious danger" following a heart attack she suffered in prison last month.
17:05 18.4.2026

Iran Says It's Reviewing New US Proposals, No Response Yet

Iran’s top national security body says that Tehran is reviewing “new proposals” from the United States delivered through Pakistani army chief Asim Munir, but has not yet responded.

In a statement on April 18, the Supreme National Security Council said the proposals had been presented in recent days with Munir acting as an intermediary in negotiations.

It stressed, however, that Iran’s negotiating team “will not make even the slightest compromise, retreat or leniency,” and would defend national interests “with all its strength.”

In the early hours of April 18, Trump also said he had heard some "good news" regarding Iran and believed efforts to finalize a peace agreement with Tehran were progressing well.

At the same time, he warned that if no agreement is reached by April 22 -- the formal end of a two-week cease-fire -- he might “have to start dropping bombs again.”

The security council also said Tehran considers anongoing US naval blockade of Iranian ports a “violation of the cease-fire” and is refusing to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

The statement said Iran “is determined to maintain supervision and control over transit through the Strait of Hormuz until the definitive end of the war and the achievement of lasting peace in the region.”

Hours earlier, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps also said that because of the continued US blockade, the situation in the strait had “returned to its previous state.”

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi had earlier announced the reopening of the strait on April 17 afternoon, and there had been reports of ships and oil tankers transiting the waterway.

16:39 18.4.2026

Iran Fires On Ships In Strait Of Hormuz, Trump Says 'They Can't Blackmail Us'

US President Donald Trump speaks to the media at the White House on April 18.
US President Donald Trump speaks to the media at the White House on April 18.

Hopes that shipping would resume through the Strait of Hormuz proved short-lived on April 18, as Iranian forces attacked at least three civilian ships after Tehran announced it was reversing its decision to reopen the vital waterway.

United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO), a shipping security monitor, detailed three attacks -- the first such incidents since a cease-fire began on April 8.

In the first incident, two Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) gunboats fired on a tanker without warning, UKMTO said.

Later, it said a container ship was "hit by a projectile," while there was a near miss with an attack on a third vessel.

Speaking in Washington, US President Donald Trump said "They got a little cute...They wanted to close up the strait again, you know, as they've been doing for years. And they can't blackmail us."

But Trump also said there were "good conversations going on" with Iran and that "we'll have some information by the end of the day."

Earlier, shipping tracking data had showed several vessels passing through the strait. But many of them turned back as news of Iran's decision and the IRGC attacks filtered through.

Read more here.

16:37 18.4.2026

Macron Blames Hezbollah For Killing French UNIFIL Soldier

French troops have been monitoring the border area between Israel and Lebanon since 1978. (file photo)
French troops have been monitoring the border area between Israel and Lebanon since 1978. (file photo)

Emmanuel Macron said a French soldier serving with the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) was killed and three others wounded in Lebanon, with evidence pointing to Hezbollah,

Writing on X on April 18, the French president said “everything suggests” Hezbollah was responsible and urged Lebanese authorities to arrest those behind the attack.

Hezbollah is a militant group and political party that controls much of southern Lebanon. It is considered a terrorist organization by the United States, while the European Union has blacklisted its armed wing.

UNIFIL said an initial assessment also indicated Hezbollah fighters were involved in the attack.

Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam condemned the assault, while President Joseph Aoun spoke with Macron after the incident.

UNIFIL personnel have been monitoring the border area between Israel and Lebanon since 1978.

Hezbollah later issued a statement denying responsibility for the attack, according to Reuters.

With reporting by dpa and Reuters
14:56 18.4.2026

Agency Says Container Ship Hit By 'Unknown Projectile'

The UKMTO maritime security agency, which issues alerts for commercial shipping, said on April 18 that it had received a report of a container ship 25 nautical miles northeast of Oman being "hit by an unknown projectile which caused damage."

14:02 18.4.2026

Open, Then Closed: Few Ships Sail Amid Hormuz Uncertainty

Some vessels were reported to have been transiting the Strait of Hormuz on April 18, according to a ship-tracking platform. (file photo)
Some vessels were reported to have been transiting the Strait of Hormuz on April 18, according to a ship-tracking platform. (file photo)

Hopes that shipping would resume through the Strait of Hormuz proved short-lived on April 18, with Iran's announcement that it was reopening the vital waterway being reversed just hours later and only a handful of vessels daring to attempt a passage.

Oil prices had plunged following the initial reopening announcement the previous day, and shipping tracking data showed several vessels passing through the strait.

Some of these were shadow fleet tankers on the US sanctions list, including two liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) tankers: the Gardian and the Rain.

These were seen heading through the strait and onwards towards open seas -- where the US naval blockade could potentially interdict them.

Other ships seeking to take advantage of the reopening of the strait were not sanctioned vessels. These included liquefied natural gas (LNG) tankers.

"What began as a cautious trickle yesterday is building into a steadier flow today," noted maritime intelligence company Windward in a social media post.

But the optimism dissolved as Iranian state media announced that the decision to open the strait had now been reversed, in response to US President Donald Trump's decision to keep his country's naval blockade of Iran in place.

“As long as the passage of vessels from Iranian origin [or] to Iranian destination remains under threat, the status of the Strait of Hormuz will remain in its previous state,” said a statement by the command of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).

Soon afterwards, some vessels that had set sail through the strait turned around and headed back.

Read our latest news round here.

13:48 18.4.2026

Iran's Internet Shutdown Enters 50th Day, Says Monitor

The Netblocks Internet connectivity monitor says that Iran's near-total digital blackout has entered its 50th day "to the detriment of most Iranians' livelihoods and human rights."


13:44 18.4.2026

CENTCOM Says US Blockade Is Being Enforced

United States Central Command (CENTCOM), the US military command responsible for the Middle East, said 23 ships have been turned back since Washington began enforcing its maritime blockade on vessels entering or leaving Iranian ports and coastal waters.

13:21 18.4.2026

Tanker Incident Reported Near Oman

United ⁠Kingdom ⁠Maritime ‌Trade Operations (UKMTO), a British maritime security agency that issues alerts for commercial shipping, said on April 18 that ⁠it had received a report of a tanker being approached by "two IRGC gunboats” 20 nautical miles northeast of ‌Oman and then being “fired upon.”

The captain of the tanker said the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps' gunboats opened fire without issuing a radio challenge, ‌according to the UKMTO statement, which added that the vessel and its crew were reported safe.

12:39 18.4.2026

Iranian Lawmaker Claims War Will Continue Until Complete Defeat Of US And Israel

Iranian lawmaker Mahmud Nabavian (file photo)
Iranian lawmaker Mahmud Nabavian (file photo)

Mahmud Nabavian, a member of the Iranian parliament's national security and foreign policy commission, said negotiations between Iran and the United States will lead nowhere and that Tehran will continue the war until the “complete defeat of Trump and Netanyahu.”

Nabavian, who accompanied the Iranian negotiating delegation in Islamabad, said in a speech in Arak addressing “certain officials” late on April 17 that “responsibility for controlling the Strait of Hormuz lies solely with the IRGC Navy, and no one will have the right to interfere.”

The lawmaker did not name the officials he was referring to, but he has previously made statements in media outlets close to the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and on social media whose tone and content differed from those of the main members of Iran’s negotiating team with the United States.

Since Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi announced that the Strait of Hormuz would reopen on April 17, a wave of opposition and criticism from hardline factions within the government has emerged against the negotiating team and the announced developments and decisions, widening internal political divisions.

Iran later reversed its decision to reopen the strait, state media reported on April 18.

In another part of his speech, Nabavian said a measure had been approved in the parliamentary security commission under which Iran would block the passage of US military ships through the Strait of Hormuz.

He added that vessels from any country that “gives bases to the enemy” would also be barred from transiting the strait.

Measures approved by parliamentary commissions must still be voted on in a full parliamentary session, then sent to the Guardians Council, and after final approval formally promulgated by the president before becoming law.

11:00 18.4.2026

Iran Reverses Decision To Reopen Strait Of Hormuz

Some vessels had been reported to be transiting the Strait of Hormuz on April 18. (file photo)
Some vessels had been reported to be transiting the Strait of Hormuz on April 18. (file photo)

Iran has reversed its decision to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, citing the continued United States naval blockade of Iranian ports, according to the Fars News Agency, which is close to the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps.

A spokesman for Khatam-al Anbiya central headquarters, which is the unified command structure of Iran's military, said control of the strait had “returned to its previous state” and was again under strict military management.

Ebrahim Zulfaqari said Tehran had earlier agreed “with good intentions” to allow limited passage for oil tankers and commercial ships during the cease-fire, but "unfortunately, the Americans... continue to engage in piracy...under the so-called 'blockade.'"

Iran had reopened the route on April 17 after weeks of near-total disruption, a move welcomed by US President Donald Trump, who nevertheless said his country's naval blockade of Iranian ports would remain in place.

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