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    You are at:Home»Trending & Viral News»Middle East crisis live: Iran denies asking for a ceasefire after Trump claim that Tehran wants to negotiate | US-Israel war on Iran
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    Middle East crisis live: Iran denies asking for a ceasefire after Trump claim that Tehran wants to negotiate | US-Israel war on Iran

    Earth & BeyondBy Earth & BeyondMarch 15, 20260011 Mins Read
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    Middle East crisis live: Iran denies asking for a ceasefire after Trump claim that Tehran wants to negotiate | US-Israel war on Iran
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    Summary of the day so far…

    • Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, denied Tehran had asked for a ceasefire or even a negotiation to end the war, in comments undermining Donald Trump’s claim that Iran wanted to make a deal.

    • Araghchi also said that Iran was open to countries who wanted to “talk” about safe passage through the strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important shipping channels, which has effectively been closed due to the war.

    • Iran has attacked ships and reportedly started to lay mines in the strait, in effect closing it to marine traffic, leading to a surge in energy prices and inflation fears around the world.

    • Countries including the UK, Japan, China and South Korea have said they are still considering their options after Trump urged them to send warships to the strait to secure the vital shipping route.

    • Trump told NBC News that the “terms aren’t good enough yet” for a deal with Iran. He said Tehran’s commitment to completely abandoning any nuclear weapons ambitions would be part of any agreement.

    • US energy secretary Chris Wright said he expects the US-Israel war with Iran to end within “the next few weeks” amid a spike in gas prices in the US.

    • The Lebanese health ministry said 850 people, including over 100 children, have been killed in Israeli attacks on the country since 2 March.

    • Israel said it launched extensive airstrikes across western Iran today. The IDF said earlier it had detected Iranian missiles being fired at Israel.

    • Israeli military warned several neighbourhoods in the southern suburbs of the Lebanese capital of Beirut to evacuate “immediately” ahead of Israeli attacks.

    • Oil-loading operations at Fujairah, the UAE’s main oil port on its east coast, have reportedly restarted after it was targeted by a drone strike on Saturday.

    • The Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said the new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, is “in good health” and “fully managing the situation” despite ongoing speculation regarding his whereabouts. In his interview with NBC News, Trump questioned whether the 56-year-old was “even alive”.

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    Key events

    Gaza’s main gateway, the Rafah crossing with Egypt that was shut at the start of the Iran war, will open on Wednesday for limited movement of people in both directions, Israel’s COGAT, the military body in charge of humanitarian matters, said on Sunday in a statement.

    The crossing had reopened in early February after being largely shut since May 2024, in the early months of Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza. Its reopening offered some relief to Palestinians who want to leave Gaza for medical care or those who want to return after fleeing the fighting.

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    Pope Leo called for an immediate ceasefire Sunday in the escalating conflict with Iran, mourning the “atrocious violence” that has claimed thousands of civilian lives and spread suffering across the Middle East.

    As the US-Israeli military campaign enters its third week, the first American-born Pope warned that continued bloodshed would fail to deliver the stability and peace so desperately sought by the people of the region.

    “For two weeks, the peoples of the Middle East have been suffering the atrocious violence of war,” the pope said at his weekly Angelus prayer in St. Peter’s Square.

    “In the name of Christians in the Middle East and of all women and men of good will, I appeal to those responsible for this conflict: Cease fire!” Pope Leo said.

    Leo added that the situation in Lebanon, ravaged by a war between Israel and the Iran-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah, was also a cause of “great concern”.

    “I hope for paths of dialogue that can support the country’s authorities in implementing lasting solutions to the serious crisis currently underway, for the common good of all the Lebanese people,” the pope said.

    He later said during a visit to a Rome parish that “many of our brothers and sisters in the world are suffering because of violent conflicts, caused by the absurd claim that problems and disagreements can be resolved through war, when instead we must engage in unceasing dialogue for peace.”

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    The Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) confirmed on Sunday that the 2026 Finalissima, a highly anticipated clash between South American champions Argentina and European champions Spain, has been cancelled due to the war.

    Originally set for March 27 at Doha’s Lusail Stadium in Qatar, the site of Argentina’s 2022 World Cup victory, the match was called off because of the escalating war in the Middle East. While UEFA proposed alternative European venues like the Santiago Bernabéu, the Argentinian Football Association (AFA) rejected the move to Spain, and both sides failed to reach an agreement on a neutral site.

    The war has caused a wave of cancellations and uncertainty across the sporting world. The Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix, scheduled for April, have been officially removed from the 2026 calendar on safety grounds. Trump has also suggested it would not be “appropriate” for Iran’s national team to compete in the upcoming tournament for “their own life and safety.”

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    Italy says Kuwait airbase hosting US and Italian forces attacked

    Italy’s military said on Sunday there had been a drone attack on the Ali Al Salem airbase in Kuwait hosting Italian and US forces, but said all its personnel were safe.

    “This morning, Ali Al Salem base in Kuwait was the target of a drone attack that hit a shelter housing a remotely piloted aircraft of the Italian Task Force Air (TFA), which was destroyed,” chief of the Defense General Staff, Luciano Portolano, said in a statement posted by Italy’s Ministry of Defense on X.

    The statement adds that the Italian contingent of Task Force Air had been scaled back in recent days “as part of measures adopted in response to the evolving security situation in the area”.

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    Updated at 17.31 GMT

    US Central Command (Centcom) issued a rebuttal to claims made by Iran’s foreign minister, dismissing allegations that the US is launching drone strikes against Gulf nations as a “lie”.

    In a statement on social media, Centcom claimed that “Iranian forces have launched thousands of drones AND missiles at its neighbors, indiscriminately targeting civilian hotels, commercial airports, residential communities and economic infrastructure. US attack drones are only targeting Iranian military capabilities to eliminate threats posed to the region.”

    While Centcom maintains that its operations are strictly precise and defensive, Iranian humanitarian and state sources provide a much grimmer assessment of civilian infrastructure damage. The Iranian Red Crescent has reported upwards of 19,000 residential buildings have been damaged or destroyed.

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    Updated at 17.10 GMT

    US energy secretary plays down rise in gas prices

    Edward Helmore

    Energy secretary Chris Wright said Sunday that there’s “a very good chance” gas prices could drop below $3 a gallon by summer — though that is contingent on the Iran conflict’s end.

    Wright told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that while US drivers “are feeling it right now” at the pump and “will feel it for a few more weeks”, Wright once the Iran war is over, “we’ll go to a world more abundant in energy, more affordable in energy, and less risky for American soldiers and commerce in the Middle East.”

    But he also acknowledged “there’s no guarantees in war” and the time frame for gasoline to drop back below $3 a gallon was “still not entirely clear”. He added that a pre-war price target in time for summer travel season is “a goal of the [Trump] administration”.

    On Saturday, gas prices averaged $3.70 a gallon, according to GasBuddy, up from $2.94 per gallon on 1 March.

    Donald Trump dismissed concerns about rising gas prices in the US in a phone call to NBC on Saturday, with the president saying: “I think they’ll go lower than they were before, and I had them at record lows. There’s so much oil, gas — there’s so much out there, but you know, it’s being clogged up a little bit. It’ll be unclogged very soon”.

    Key to making those predictions a reality is the strait of Hormuz. Wright acknowledged Sunday that strait is not currently safe for transit but said making it safe is “one of the objectives at the end of this conflict”.

    Iran has warned that if the US strikes its oil infrastructure on Kharg Island it will hit oil infrastructure of the US and its allies in the region. Trump on Saturday called on China, France, Japan, South Korea, the UK and all “affected by this artificial constraint” to send ships to the area “so that Iran will no longer threaten the strait”.

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    Updated at 17.10 GMT

    Israel’s military is claiming that the brother of a man who attacked a Michigan synagogue last week was a Hezbollah commander. Ibrahim Ghazali was killed in an Israeli airstrike in Lebanon along with three other of the attacker’s relatives on March 5 — a week before authorities allege Ayman Mohamad Ghazali drove his car into a major synagogue outside Detroit and killed himself after security fired at him.

    The Israeli military on Sunday alleged Ibrahim Ghazali was a Hezbollah commander who managed weapons for a unit that fired rockets at Israel.

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    Summary of the day so far…

    • Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, denied Tehran had asked for a ceasefire or even a negotiation to end the war, in comments undermining Donald Trump’s claim that Iran wanted to make a deal.

    • Araghchi also said that Iran was open to countries who wanted to “talk” about safe passage through the strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important shipping channels, which has effectively been closed due to the war.

    • Iran has attacked ships and reportedly started to lay mines in the strait, in effect closing it to marine traffic, leading to a surge in energy prices and inflation fears around the world.

    • Countries including the UK, Japan, China and South Korea have said they are still considering their options after Trump urged them to send warships to the strait to secure the vital shipping route.

    • Trump told NBC News that the “terms aren’t good enough yet” for a deal with Iran. He said Tehran’s commitment to completely abandoning any nuclear weapons ambitions would be part of any agreement.

    • US energy secretary Chris Wright said he expects the US-Israel war with Iran to end within “the next few weeks” amid a spike in gas prices in the US.

    • The Lebanese health ministry said 850 people, including over 100 children, have been killed in Israeli attacks on the country since 2 March.

    • Israel said it launched extensive airstrikes across western Iran today. The IDF said earlier it had detected Iranian missiles being fired at Israel.

    • Israeli military warned several neighbourhoods in the southern suburbs of the Lebanese capital of Beirut to evacuate “immediately” ahead of Israeli attacks.

    • Oil-loading operations at Fujairah, the UAE’s main oil port on its east coast, have reportedly restarted after it was targeted by a drone strike on Saturday.

    • The Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said the new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, is “in good health” and “fully managing the situation” despite ongoing speculation regarding his whereabouts. In his interview with NBC News, Trump questioned whether the 56-year-old was “even alive”.

    Share

    Iran ‘open to countries who want to talk about safe passage’ through strait of Hormuz, foreign minister says

    We can bring you more from the CBS News interview with the Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, who was questioned about the effective closure of the strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important shipping channels. He was asked specifically about a report in the Financial Times that said European diplomats from France and Italy were talking to the Iranian government about trying to get safe passage for their ships.

    “We are open to countries who want to talk to us about the safe passage of their vessels,” Araghchi replied. Margaret Brennan then pressed him on whether Tehran was negotiating with diplomats from France and Italy, to which the foreign minister replied:

    double quotation markI cannot mention any country in particular, but we have been approached by a number of countries who wants to have a safe passage for their vessels.

    And this is up to our military to decide, and they have already decided to let, you know, a group of vessels belongs to different countries to pass in a safe and secure.

    So we provide them security to pass because we have not closed this strait. They are not coming themselves because of the insecurity which is there, because of the aggression by the US.

    Since the US and Israel first launched strikes on Iran a fortnight ago, numerous ships travelling through the strait have been attacked. It is now effectively closed, driving up oil prices around the world. Trump has urged countries including the UK, China and France to send warships to the strait to help secure the key shipping route.

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    As a reminder, speaking to NBC News yesterday, Donald Trump said: “Iran wants to make a deal, and I don’t want to make it because the terms aren’t good enough yet.” The president added that US forces would step up attacks on the Iranian coast north of the strait to clear a path for oil shipments.

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