Iran fires on targets across Mideast while Israel-US hit Tehran

Iran fired on targets on Friday across the Middle East, damaging a desalination plant and setting a refinery ablaze in Kuwait, while American and Israeli airstrikes hit the Islamic Republic as the war neared the end of its fifth week. Tehran has kept the pressure on Israel and its Gulf Arab neighbours, despite US and Israeli insistence that Iran’s military capabilities have been all but destroyed. In a sign that part of Iran’s theocracy could be willing to negotiate, the country’s former top diplomat published a proposal for ending the conflict in an influential American magazine.
Iran’s attacks on Gulf energy infrastructure and its tight grip on the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil and natural gas transits in peacetime, have roiled stock markets, sent oil prices skyrocketing, and threatened to raise the cost of many basic goods, including food.
Iran’s ability to wreak havoc in the global economy has proved a major strategic advantage, and world leaders have struggled to figure out how to reopen the waterway. The UN Security Council was expected to look at a new proposal.
Iran’s former top diplomat suggests terms to end the war: Former Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif - a seasoned diplomat with long experience negotiating with the West who remains close to a pragmatic wing of Iran’s leadership — wrote on Friday that the time has come to end the suffering on both sides.
“Prolonged hostility will cause a greater loss of precious lives and irreplaceable resources without actually altering the existing stalemate,” Zarif, who helped negotiate Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, wrote in Foreign Affairs magazine. The US has presented Iran with a 15-point plan for a ceasefire that includes reopening the Strait of Hormuz, dismantling Iran’s nuclear facilities and limiting its missile production in exchange for sanctions relief. But no signs of progress were apparent in the diplomatic effort.
Iran’s initial five-point counterproposal aired by hard-line state television included recognising Iran’s sovereignty over the strait, the removal of US bases from the region, compensation for war damage, and a guarantee against further aggression — all things likely unpalatable to the Trump administration.
Zarif’s proposal included elements of both plans. Iran “should offer to place limits on its nuclear program and to reopen the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for an end to all sanctions — a deal Washington wouldn’t take before but might accept now,” he wrote.
Tehran and Washington were in talks about Iran’s nuclear programme when the US and Israel began bombing on February 28 — the second time under President Donald Trump that the US has attacked while in high-level negotiations.
It’s not clear how much to read into Zarif’s proposal. While he has no official position now in Iran’s government, he helped get reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian elected and would likely not have published such a piece without at least some authorisation from senior leaders.
But it also remains clear who in Iran has the authority to negotiate, since many of Iran’s leaders have been killed in the war. Immediately after the piece came out, Zarif wrote he had been “torn” about it — a sign he may already face pressure at home. What’s more, it’s not clear how Trump will respond.
He has vacillated between saying the US is negotiating an end to the war and threatening to expand it. Thousands of US Marines and paratroopers have been ordered to the region, raising speculation that there could be a ground offensive.















