Key Takeaways:
- Trump threatened to destroy every power plant and bridge in Iran if the country rejects a proposed deal by April 22, 2026.
- Iranian IRGC gunboats fired on commercial vessels Saturday, hitting ships linked to France and the UK, triggering a ceasefire breach.
- U.S. negotiators are returning to Islamabad, Pakistan, for talks as Iran loses roughly $500 million daily from the ongoing naval blockade.
Trump Draws the Line on Iran
Trump posted the threat on Truth Social on April 19, 2026, stating the United States would “knock out every single Power Plant, and every single Bridge, in Iran” if Tehran refused to accept a deal. He labeled the gunfire a direct violation of the two-week ceasefire that took effect on April 7.
The incident occurred Saturday, April 18, when Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps gunboats reportedly fired on at least two commercial vessels. Ships connected to France and the United Kingdom were among those targeted. Marine traffic data showed no vessels crossing the strait by Sunday.
Iran had briefly signaled a reopening of the waterway tied to ceasefire terms before reversing course Saturday. Iranian officials reasserted control over the strait, turned back oil tankers flagged out of Botswana and Angola, and cited the ongoing U.S. naval blockade of Iranian ports as an act of aggression.
Trump rejected that framing. He said the blockade, imposed around April 12, stays in place until Iran agrees to a “100% complete” deal. He added that Iran was losing roughly $500 million per day in oil revenue because of the closed passage.
U.S. negotiators are headed back to Islamabad for talks expected Monday evening. The Pakistan-brokered ceasefire expires approximately on April 22. The ceasefire was conditional on Iran fully reopening the strait and never fully resolving core disputes. Both governments now accuse the other of violating its terms.
The deeper conflict traces back to Iran‘s nuclear program. The International Atomic Energy Agency has reported Iran enriching uranium near weapons-grade levels with a stockpile large enough for multiple bombs. Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign demands zero enrichment, full dismantlement of sites at Natanz, Fordow, and Isfahan, and an end to proxy operations. Iran insists on its right to enrichment for civilian purposes and wants sanctions relief and security guarantees.
Direct military confrontations began accelerating in June 2025, when Israel struck Iranian nuclear and military sites in what was called the Twelve-Day War. U.S. forces joined those strikes, targeting Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan. A temporary ceasefire followed, but talks collapsed again.
On Feb. 28, 2026, the U.S. and Israel launched renewed strikes. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was killed during that campaign. Iran retaliated and moved to restrict the Strait of Hormuz, which carries roughly 20 percent of global oil and liquefied natural gas.
The strait has become the central pressure point in negotiations. Iran has used access to the waterway as leverage against American military action. The U.S. sees those restrictions as economic coercion. Irreconcilable positions on enrichment rights, sanctions, and the strait itself have produced repeated cycles of brinkmanship.
Trump’s public threats follow a pattern he established in March and April 2026, using extreme public pressure alongside diplomatic overtures. Oil markets are watching developments closely as the April 22 deadline approaches and the outcome of the Islamabad talks remains uncertain.
The ceasefire could still hold or collapse entirely, with renewed military action a possibility if negotiations fail before the deadline.







