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Iran's Foreign Minister Araghchi visits Oman for talks on reopening the Strait of Hormuz as the US-Iran ceasefire collapses

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi led a delegation to Muscat on July 11 for talks with Omani officials centred on reopening the [[strait-of-hormuz]], even as US President Donald Trump had declared the June ceasefire 'over'; the US demanded [[iran|Iran]] publicly state that Hormuz is open and pledge to stop firing on commercial ships; analysts said the door to diplomacy remained open despite the exchange of attacks, while a pre-visit briefing noted Araghchi would hold Hormuz-specific talks with Oman

领导人·航运· escalating 战争究竟如何收场·他们没说的 ·5 视角 · ·rbtfl 更新 2026年7月13日
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同一条新闻,各国新闻编辑室如何讲述。引文均注明出处并链接原文。

Iran

Islam Times

“Araghchi to hold Hormuz talks in Oman.”

Iran-aligned English outlet; the first to announce the trip, framing Araghchi's Oman visit as dedicated to Hormuz-specific talks, signalling Iran was still seeking a negotiated outcome even while fighting continued阅读原文 ↗

Vatican City

Vatican News

“The United States has called on Iran to publicly state that the Strait of Hormuz is open and to pledge to stop firing on commercial ships.”

Vatican's multilingual news service; reports the US position explicitly: Washington wants Iran to publicly state Hormuz is open and pledge to stop firing on commercial ships, framing the talks as strained阅读原文 ↗

United States

ms.now

“A delegation from Iran led by Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi visited Oman for talks centered on reopening the Strait of Hormuz.”

US digital outlet; confirms the visit has happened, names Araghchi as the delegation lead, and reports the talks also included Gulf leaders rather than being exclusively bilateral with Oman阅读原文 ↗

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Summary

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi led a delegation to Muscat on July 11 to hold talks with Oman on reopening the Strait of Hormuz, even as US President Donald Trump had declared the June memorandum of understanding "over" and fighting between US and Iranian forces continued. Iran-aligned media announced the trip as Hormuz-specific, and a separate US diplomatic source said Washington wants Iran to publicly state the strait is open and to stop attacking commercial vessels as conditions for any renewed agreement.

Araghchi's talks were not only with Oman but also involved Gulf leaders, according to US reporting. Analysts covering the situation told Al Jazeera the door to diplomacy remained open despite the exchange of attacks.

Why it matters

Oman has served as the primary back-channel between the US and Iran throughout the June ceasefire and its aftermath. Araghchi visiting Muscat while fighting continues suggests Iran is maintaining the diplomatic track in parallel with military operations, rather than choosing between them. The US conditions, demanding Iran publicly affirm an open Hormuz and stop commercial shipping attacks, make any agreement harder to reach quickly, since those steps would require Iran to scale back its primary leverage over oil markets.

What to watch

  • Whether the Araghchi-Oman talks produce a written agreement or a private understanding on Hormuz traffic
  • How Oman's own diplomatic position changes now that Iranian drones have struck Omani territory on July 12, the day after this visit
  • Whether the US conditions (public Hormuz statement, stop commercial attacks) are met, narrowed, or abandoned in back-channel negotiation

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