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US Awaits Iran's Response to Peace Proposal

Is the U.S. losing its grip on the Persian Gulf or is Iran the one running out of options?
US Awaits Iran's Response to Peace Proposal
Above: An armed Iranian police officer stands guard on an armored vehicle, monitoring the area during a state-run religious rally in downtown Tehran, Iran, on April 29. Image credit: Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto/Getty Images

The Spin


Pro-Iran narrative

The U.S. military presence in the Persian Gulf has been exposed as a hollow threat. American bases couldn't even protect themselves from Iranian missile and drone strikes. The Strait of Hormuz will operate under new management rules, as the future of the region belongs to its nations — not to foreign powers thousands of miles away.

Pro-Trump narrative

Iran is in no position to dictate terms — the U.S. controls the Strait of Hormuz, the Iranian economy is rationing food and gasoline and internal divisions are so severe that a deal may never happen. President Trump has made clear the blockade holds until pre-Feb. 27 freedom of navigation is restored. Tehran's tough talk is the sound of a regime running out of options.

Anti-Trump narrative

After weeks of withholding information from Congress about the state of Trump's disastrous war, Republicans' effort to shift responsibility reveals a sense that legal justifications were being improvised to mask a faltering strategy. While the Trump administration hit its self-imposed deadline and scrambled for cover, a stark conclusion has emerged — the primary barrier to achieving peace lies in the actions of both the Secretary of Defense and the U.S. president.



The Controversies



Go Deeper

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 7.4.1

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 7.4.1