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Asia Times

Taiwan’s KMT offers US an off-ramp from war with China F/A-XX fighter tests future of US carrier power against China US, China forge rival fusion chains as Europe weighs role Who is calling the shots in Iran? Large Hadron Collider results hint at undiscovered physics The US counterterrorism czar without a counterterrorism plan Japan’s Takaichi chooses guns over butter — at her peril Iran war leaves Asian nations weighing their nuclear options Southeast Asia holds the key to unlocking Korean impasse In jab at Taiwan, China ramps up military support for Somalia Iran war is turbocharging China’s Africa pivot China’s drone-laid mines aim to trap US in a Taiwan war AI and robots can’t fill bellies – so, capitalism’s end? Next, an Iran nuclear deal with Chinese characteristics Iran, not US, cancels Hormuz blockade after Israel-Lebanon truce Israel-Lebanon ceasefire no tidy end to fighting, Hormuz shutdown Congressional Dems probe envoy Jared Kushner’s Arab money ties Manacled Manus: the limits of ‘Singapore washing’ for China AI China Shock 2.0 jolts global economy as Trump does Xi’s work Disrupted supply chains, divided politics Will Russia attack Ukraine’s European drone suppliers? AI shrinking the margin for nuclear error in South Asia Iran's low-cost drones democratizing precision warfare - Asia Times Israel-Lebanon ceasefire won’t end the death and suffering Don’t hold your breath on a truly European NATO AI boom’s real profits are being made in Asia Hong Kong banks dependent on SWIFT are warned of new US sanctions US starting to respond to challenge of massive drone incursions - Asia Times Trans-Himalayan net zero is a strategic necessity for Asia Alarm bells follow new report of looming US plan to attack Cuba Trump says Israel and Lebanon have agreed to 10-day ceasefire Cuba: the Bay of Pigs invasion 65 years later The legendary cyberpunk anime ‘Akira’ demands a rewatch China’s satellite boost gives Iran a US targeting edge Indonesia losing its sovereign way between US and China Taiwan’s opposition courting China as faith in US fades China carefully navigating Iran’s tighter Hormuz grip Will oil prices ever truly return to ‘normal’? Russia’s war on Telegram may ignite the very fire it fears US Big Oil earning $30 million per hour from Iran war Sending combat troops to exercise, Japan leaves WWII ghosts behind - Asia Times Trump budget director defends 43% military spending boost Don’t believe claims Southeast Asia scam schemes were shut down Blockade v blockade fallout may be not just a world energy crisis Iran war putting China’s economy in a tight spot New resistance alliance built to win Myanmar's civil war - Asia Times US Navy leaning on AI to sweep Iran’s Hormuz mines Trump vs Pope: A US-Vatican rift centuries in the making - Asia Times US Hormuz blockade may not survive a Chinese standoff - Asia Times Iran war inflicting losses that will never be recovered Did Trump just light the match for World War III? Allied shipyards key to closing US naval gap with China Russia’s navy deterred Estonia from boarding its ‘shadow fleet’ In Hormuz war of words, US illustrates threat with ‘drug boat’ hit China faces Trump’s Iran offensive in the Hormuz Strait Medieval Christian tropes inflaming Islamophobic Iran war debate EU loan aims to keep Ukraine war going until 2029 Third China Shock exposing US’s broken defense economics Who should speak for Myanmar? Not Min Aung Hlaing - Asia Times Humanity isn’t ready for AI’s biological threat Quad needs to break China’s rare earth hold on Myanmar Iran war threatening to shatter the global economy - Asia Times US Air Force unready for a prolonged war with China US Hormuz blockade, tariffs jolt China - Asia Times Trump needs A-10s to go after Iranian speedboats and patrol ships NATO allies bash Trump’s Hormuz blockade as oil passes $100 a bbl Trump: with God on his side?  - Asia Times Top Iran diplomat: Deal ‘inches away,’ Trump team sabotaged talks Iran war as a cage Trump can't escape - Asia Times Dueling Hormuz blockades push world to the brink China tech companies going gangbusters in the Gulf Quantum computers to break our codes faster than expected To Lam’s Vietnam drifting perceptibly closer to China Hungarian voters end 16 straight years of Orban’s far-right rule Five emerging themes for the Indo-Pacific from Trump's Iran war - Asia Times Trump announces closure of Hormuz Strait as Iran talks falter - Asia Times Iran has weakened US in the great power game Time to give the Trump-Putin-Orban axis a slap in the face China’s Middle East billions still woefully reliant on US gunboats Indonesia can’t stay silent on China’s UUV incursion Too many players, too many grievances for one ceasefire to hold Japan’s unsustainable pacifist delusion US lawmakers seek to block China’s DUV lithography access For South Korea, an alliance in question Trump aides caught with pants down as Iran war gooses inflation Non-rich Asian states, hit hardest by Iran crisis, ration energy Structural strains grip Tokyo and Seoul US isn’t losing soft power in SE Asia — it’s ceding it to China KMT’s ‘imperialist’ rhetoric shifts Taiwan’s democratic fault line The deal to reopen Hormuz is nowhere near done Iran ceasefire: too many brokers, too little leverage Ending Israel’s war on peace Iran ceasefire won’t easily ease emerging Asia’s pain N Korea building a new war playbook from Iran and Ukraine America’s Soviet moment: Why Trump is looking like Yeltsin Can Pakistan deliver as Washington’s go-to mediator with Iran? CNBC anchor mulls investor ‘upside’ of Trump civilizational threat With Middle East in flames, Trump eyes ‘next conquest’ Vietnam: all the power in To Lam’s grasping hands Mooted South China Sea oil deal with China draws fire in Manila
Iran diplomat leaves Islamabad, Trump cancels US delegation trip
Julia Conley · 2026-04-26 · via Asia Times

US President Donald Trump on Saturday abruptly canceled a planned visit by two of his administration’s negotiators to the Pakistani capital for diplomatic talks to end his war on Iran, complaining that the trip would be “too much work.”

The president announced his decision after Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi left Islamabad on Saturday, writing in a social media post that he’d relayed to Pakistani officials “Iran’s position concerning a workable framework to permanently end the war on Iran.” Araghchi added that he had “yet to see if the US is truly serious about diplomacy.”

Iranian officials said repeatedly in recent days that they had no intention of engaging in direct talks with the Trump administration this weekend as long as the US naval blockade remained in effect. Despite clear statements from Iran’s leadership, the Trump White House insisted that special envoys Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff would be holding another round of direct negotiations with Iranian officials in Islamabad after earlier talks ended without a deal.

“This has happened repeatedly: Trump claims the Iranians are begging for talks, Iran says it is false,” observed Drop Site’s Jeremy Scahill. “The US says Iran is lying, and then it becomes clear Iran meant what it said.”

In an assessment published before Trump canceled his envoys’ trip, Scahill wrote that “there is no question it is the US that is seeking direct talks right now, not Iran.”

“Iran still believes it is likely the US and Israel will resume the war and has indicated it has prepared new forms of retaliatory strikes and other actions, including in the Strait of Hormuz,” Scahill added. “Its military commanders have said that while the US has moved more military assets into the region during the ‘ceasefire,’ Tehran has also taken this period to prepare its own weapons systems for more fighting.”

Trump insisted Saturday that his administration holds “all the cards” and that Iranian leadership is in turmoil. But Sina Toossi, a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy, wrote that “Trump can’t hide exuding desperation for a deal.”

“So he invents ‘fractures’ in Tehran to explain being repeatedly stood up,” Toossi added. “Iran’s line is unchanged: demanding the blockade be lifted and holding on to its core red lines. They’re playing hardball. He’s spinning.”

Trump’s cancellation of the Kushner-Witkoff trip came hours after NBC News reported that “American military bases and other equipment in the Persian Gulf region suffered extensive damage from Iranian strikes that is far worse than publicly acknowledged and is expected to cost billions of dollars to repair.”

“The Iran war was a tactical and strategic disaster,” said Toossi. “Despite heavy efforts to control the narrative, it’s becoming clear just how much US bases and equipment in the region were damaged or destroyed. The war backfired and inflicted far more damage than its proponents want to admit.”

Celebrities newsman highlights the absurd

Speaking of damage, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth at the latest press briefing at the Pentagon on Friday, in addition to issuing his latest threat to journalists who publish classified information obtained from sources, peppered his comments with the violent rhetoric that’s become commonplace in his public remarks.

The US military will “shoot and kill” if Iranian boats are found trying to disrupt passage through the Strait of Hormuz, which remains closed following the extension of a ceasefire this week, said Hegseth.

He added, “We will shoot to destroy, no hesitation, just like the drug boats in the Caribbean” – a reference to strikes that have killed at least 180 people the US has accused of trafficking drugs, in an operation that has been widely condemned as one of extrajudicial killings or murder.

“The War Department stands ready for what comes next, locked and loaded,” said the secretary, who has also denigrated what he refers to as “stupid” rules of engagement meant to protect civilians. “We’ll use up to and including lethal force if necessary.”

In this context it’s worth noting that amid Hegseth’s escalating efforts to control the media’s coverage of his department – including the Pentagon’s firing on Thursday of the ombudsman of the military newspaper Stars and Stripes and his demand that journalists agree to a policy prohibiting coverage that the department has not approved – a news outlet that’s new to Capitol Hill made its way into the press briefing room Friday.

The representative of the outlet, which is accustomed more to publishing celebrity gossip than to doing political coverage, asked the top military official a question that hadn’t previously come up about the deadly attacks he’s ordered in recent months.

“I’ve heard you talk a lot about bombing people and places,” said Jacob Wasserman of the celebrity news outlet TMZ, which has recently expanded its political coverage by opening an office in the nation’s capital. “And when you give these orders to carry out this extreme level of violence, what’s going through your mind and your body? Do you have, like, an adrenaline rush? Are you scared? Do you feel like you’re on a power trip?”

Hegseth appeared perplexed before smirking and dismissing the query as “a very TMZ question.” He quickly denied that a “power trip” plays into his decisions to strike targets in places including Iran, where at least 3,375 people have been killed in US-Israeli strikes, including at least 200 children; the Caribbean Ocean and Pacific Ocean, where the boat bombing campaign is continuing; and Ecuador, where US troops launched a joint campaign with the nation’s military last month, targeting suspected drug traffickers on land.

He said his “only thought process is to ensure that our war fighters have everything they need to be successful, defeat and destroy the enemy,” before adding some more of the violent rhetoric Wasserman had alluded to about bringing “maximum violence to the enemy.”

Wasserman’s colleague, Charlie Cotton, followed up with a question about whether Hegseth, who has claimed the Department of Defense has been renamed the Department of War although congressional approval would be needed for such a change, would consider again rechristening the agency as the Department of Peace, “since that’s what we’re all after.”

The question prompted Hegseth, moments after demanding “maximum violence,” to remark that “the one institution that should win the Nobel Peace Prize every single year is the United States military, because we are the guarantor of the safety and security, not just of our country, but of a lot of people in this world.”

-Common Dreams