Trump says ‘thank you’ after Iran announces opening of Strait of Hormuz
April 17, 2026 07:12 pm
Iran and US declare Strait of Hormuz “completely open,” but Iran adds that passage is on a “coordinated route” set by Tehran.
Iranian foreign minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi announced in a post on X on Friday that maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is “declared completely open for the remaining period of ceasefire.”
Moments later, US president Donald Trump announced in a social media post that “Iran has just announced that the Strait of Hormuz is fully open and ready for full passage.”
“THANK YOU!” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
The two announcements signal a positive resolution of the Hormuz crisis as part of a new momentum towards a possible second round of US-Iran talks mediated by Pakistan.
However, the Iranian foreign minister’s post said that passage is “on the coordinated route as already announced by Ports and Maritime Organisation of the Islamic Republic of Iran.”
Araghchi’s message appears to indicate a possible Iranian leverage, that Iran may still want to control the traffic as until now, despite the US blockade.
Traffic through the waterway, through which a fifth of the world’s crude oil and liquefied natural gas supplies transited before the war, has been almost completely blocked since the Iran war started with US-Israeli air strikes on 28 February.
The US launched its own naval blockade of Iranian ports came into effect on Monday, with President Donald Trump warning that any attack ships would be “eliminated” if they attempted to break it.
“Iran’s navy is laying at the bottom of the sea, completely obliterated - 158 ships. What we have not hit are their small number of, what they call, ‘fast attack ships,’ because we did not consider them much of a threat,” Trump wrote in a post on his platform Truth Social.
That has sent energy prices spiking around the world, with the International Energy Agency chief warning on Thursday that Europe only has “maybe six weeks or so of jet fuel left,” if supplies remain blocked.
Source: Euronews
--Agencies
