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Iran War Day 31: Trump Says Iran Agreed to "Most of" 15-Point Plan — Kharg Island Seizure Still on Table, Pakistan to Host Direct US-Iran Talks
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Day 31 of Operation Epic Fury. Trump told the Financial Times his favourite thing would be to take the oil in Iran. He confirmed Kharg Island — which handles ninety percent of Iran's crude exports — is still on the table for seizure. And aboard Air Force One, he claimed Iran has agreed to most of the fifteen-point US peace plan that Tehran publicly rejected just days ago.
Pakistan announced it will host direct US-Iran talks in the coming days. The Islamabad summit concluded its first day with a proposal for a Turkey-Egypt-Saudi Arabia consortium to manage oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz — a face-saving mechanism that sidesteps the bilateral sovereignty deadlock. Witkoff's personal relationship with Pakistan's army chief Asim Munir is the back-channel that is making all of it work.
Also in this episode: the full fifteen-point US plan versus Iran's five-point counter-proposal — and why the gap between them is enormous. The strategic logic behind seizing Kharg Island and why Iran's response threat could push oil above one hundred and thirty dollars. Turkey frames Hormuz safe passage as a confidence-building measure rather than a ceasefire precondition — a subtle but critical diplomatic shift. The Houthis fire for a third consecutive day, establishing a sustained operational tempo. Asian stocks fall, Brent crude hits one hundred and seven dollars ninety-two cents. An Indian worker killed in Kuwait. The USS Gerald R. Ford docks in Croatia — first carrier departure from the theatre since the war began. Iran's university ultimatum expires at noon Monday with no American response. Trump questions whether new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei is even alive. The IRGC threatens Israeli and American universities across the Gulf. Eleven thousand targets struck inside Iran. And the April sixth power plant deadline is now one week away.
The diplomacy is moving. The bombs are still falling. And somewhere in Tehran, a Supreme Leader who may or may not be operational is being asked to decide whether to meet the Americans at the table.