Fed, l’enigma Warsh (e l’ombra di Trump)
dal nostro corrispondente Marco Valsania
by Redaction esters
Treaty blocked. Tehran insists on the lifting of the port blockade and accuses Washington of unacceptable and contradictory actions, suspended the departure to Islamabad of Vice-President Vance and the US delegation. But Trump in the evening announced the extension until Iran presented a proposal.
With the countdown to the end of the truce reportedly already over, at least according to Iranian media and Pakistani mediators, the likelihood of talks in Islamabad between the United States and Iran grew increasingly dimmer and dimmer during the day on 21 April, as the hours ticked by, with no official confirmation of the delegations' departure from their respective capitals.
Conversely, oil prices went up. At least until US President Donald Trump's late-night announcement that the ceasefire will be extended 'until such time as a proposal is submitted' by Iran and 'discussions will be concluded, one way or the other'. In Tehran, Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei had explained in the evening that the reason why Iranian emissaries were not yet on their way "is not indecision, but contradictory messages and behaviour and unacceptable actions on the American side". Baghaei added that Iran would decide to take part in the negotiations "when they become result-oriented".
The US vice-president, JD Vance, the special envoy, Steve Witkoff, and the advisor, Jared Kushner (President Donald Trump's son-in-law), in turn suspended their departure and remained engaged in meetings at the White House. Also present were the Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, and the Secretary of Defence, Pete Hegseth.
The time for the initial truce, meanwhile, has now run out. Trump had initially announced that it would last two weeks from the evening of Tuesday 7 April in Washington, although he had recently speculated that it could last until the evening of today, Wednesday 22 April, effectively extending it by 24 hours. According to Reuters, a Pakistani source involved in the talks reported that the truce would expire at 3.30am on Thursday in Iran. But the Pakistani Minister of Information, Attaullah Tarar, reported that the truce would expire at 4:50 a.m. local time on Wednesday morning (1:50 a.m. in Italia). In confirmation, Iranian state television said the cease-fire would expire at 3:30am Tehran time on Wednesday (2am in Italia).