US Secretary of State Rubio said the Strait of Hormuz will be open “one way or another” as Iran deal language negotiations in Qatar could take a few more days to finalise.
Summary:
- Rubio confirmed talks took place in Qatar on Monday, describing the exchanges as focused on the specific language of an initial framework document rather than substantive negotiating positions
- He said finalising the wording of the deal could take a few more days, indicating no imminent breakthrough
- On the US strike conducted earlier Monday, Rubio was unequivocal: the Strait of Hormuz must and will be reopened, framing military action as a live alternative to a negotiated outcome
- Rubio said US strikes on Iran do not preclude a diplomatic deal, possible within days
- Rubio separately confirmed there are no active or scheduled negotiations ongoing with Ukraine
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed on Monday evening that talks between American and Iranian representatives took place in Qatar during the day, but framed the discussions as a technical exercise in drafting rather than a negotiation nearing resolution. The language of an initial framework document remains the sticking point, he said, and working through it could take a few more days.
The characterisation matters. Oil markets spent much of the session pricing in the prospect of a near-term deal, with prices falling close to 7% on thin Memorial Day volumes as Doha talks generated headlines about progress on a memorandum of understanding. Rubio’s account of those same talks is more cautious: a lot of back and forth on specific wording, no active scheduled negotiations, and no suggestion that the core issues have been resolved. The gap between market optimism and diplomatic reality may be wider than Monday’s price action implied.
The most consequential line in Rubio’s remarks, however, was not about the talks. Asked about the US military strikes conducted earlier in the day against Iranian missile sites and boats attempting to lay mines in the Gulf, Rubio was direct: the Strait of Hormuz has to be open, and it will be open one way or another.
That formulation, delivered in the same breath as an acknowledgment that diplomacy is still grinding through document language, places explicit military force on the table as an equally valid path to reopening the waterway. It is consistent with the CENTCOM framing of the earlier strikes as self-defence and with the stated policy of restraint during the ceasefire, but it goes further: it signals that Washington’s patience with a closed strait is finite, and that the timeline is being measured in days, not weeks.
The day had already illustrated the volatility of that environment. Explosions were reported across Bandar Abbas, Sirik and Jask in the hours before Rubio spoke, and CENTCOM subsequently confirmed strikes on missile launch sites and IRGC vessels attempting to place mines. The ceasefire that markets had been trading as a near-accomplished fact was, by the end of the session, looking considerably more fragile.
Rubio’s remarks tie the diplomatic and military threads together. A deal on language may come within days. If it does not, or if Iranian forces continue to test the ceasefire, the secretary of state has made the US position clear. For energy markets, the strait’s reopening remains the destination; the route there is still very much in contest.
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Rubio’s formulation, that the strait will be open “one way or another,” is the most explicit statement yet that the US is prepared to use continued military force to reopen the waterway if diplomacy fails. That framing keeps a substantial geopolitical risk premium embedded in oil prices even as markets had earlier moved to price in a deal. The admission that negotiators are still haggling over the language of an initial document, not a final agreement, suggests the timeline for any supply normalisation is longer than the Monday session’s 7% price decline implied. Energy markets will need to hold two scenarios simultaneously: a negotiated reopening potentially days away, and an escalation scenario in which US military action becomes the mechanism for forcing the strait open, with all the attendant supply disruption risk that entails.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
