Is There Really a Ceasefire in Trump's War of Aggression?

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامی

Is There Really a Ceasefire?




According to the Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Ayatollah Seyed Mojtaba Khamenei, what currently exists on the military battlefield is merely a pause, not a ceasefire.

He deliberately avoided using the term “ceasefire” because, in reality, no such ceasefire exists.

From the very first hours after it was announced, the aggressors violated it: the brutal attack on Beirut, the strikes on Iran’s facilities in Lavan and Siri, and the U.S. naval blockade that came into effect on Monday all demonstrate that there is no real ceasefire in place.

Many are asking why this situation has emerged—especially those who stood in the streets for forty consecutive nights under bombardment so that the country could endure. It is only natural that the mere mention of negotiations with the United States causes deep concern.

Over the past year, there have been two rounds of negotiations with the U.S., and the outcome is clear: on both occasions, the U.S. attacked Iran. This public concern is entirely justified and grounded in experience.

Iran’s late Supreme Leader had stated that “negotiating with the United States, even on the nuclear issue, is a complete dead end.”

The fact that negotiations are conducted under the approval of the Supreme National Security Council and with the endorsement of the Leader does not eliminate these concerns; they remain real and understandable.

The United States sitting at the negotiating table today is the same United States as a year ago—unchanged in both nature and conduct. Therefore, the martyred Imam’s key statement—that negotiating with the U.S. is a dead end—remains valid.

To assess the success or failure of negotiations, three major objectives emphasized by the Leader must be achieved:

First, the aggressor must not go unpunished. This war was imposed on Iran, and those responsible must be held accountable. At the forefront is the United States, described as the head of the opposing front, which must be deterred and made to regret its actions. The past year has been costly, even resulting in the martyrdom of the Imam.

Next, as long as the Israeli regime retains military capability, it remains a direct threat to Iran. Following that are the regional allies of the U.S. and the Israeli regime—namely certain Arab states of the Persian Gulf—that were complicit in the aggression.

Third, maintaining and managing control over the Strait of Hormuz, which is a strategic asset for Iran. This issue has evolved into part of the country’s national identity and must not be overlooked. If negotiations can secure and formalize this position, all the better; otherwise, Iran will continue on its own path.

While the country’s negotiators are respected, there is no trust in the adversary and past negotiations have left a bitter legacy.
 
US Treasury sanctions (or any US domestic law) are not automatically binding on foreign nationals operating an Iranian-flagged vessel on the high seas.

Neither the US nor Iran formally recognizes a "state of war" exists.

The United States has responded with armed force in the past when adversarial actions directly impacted U.S. shipping, without a formal declaration of war.

Examples include American responses to interdictions during the Quasi-War with France (1798–1800) or the Barbary Wars, where U.S. shipping was seized or attacked, leading to naval force without full-scale war declarations.

The War of 1812 was triggered by British interdiction, impressment, and blockades of US shipping.

The War of Jenkins' Ear (1739–1748) was also precipitated by exactly such an event: the boarding, search, alleged mistreatment, and effective seizure actions by Spanish coast guards against a British merchant ship on the high seas.

It seems hypocritical to claim that this US action was lawful then, doesn't it?
 
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