Vance warns Iran not to ‘play’ US in Islamabad talks
US vice-president JD Vance has warned Iran not to “play” the US as he headed overseas for negotiations aimed at ending their war.
Vance, who has long been sceptical of foreign military interventions and outspoken about the prospect of sending troops into open-ended conflicts, set off Friday to lead mediated talks with Iran in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad.
Boarding Air Force Two on his way to Pakistan, the vice president said:
double quotation markWe’re looking forward to the negotiation. I think it’s gonna be positive. We’ll of course see.
He cited Trump, adding: “If the Iranians are willing to negotiate in good faith, we’re certainly willing to extend the open hand.”
But he said: “If they’re gonna try and play us, then they’re gonna find that the negotiating team is not that receptive.”
Vance also said that Trump “gave us some pretty clear guidelines” on how talks should go, but he didn’t elaborate. The vice president did not take questions from reporters traveling with him.
JD Vance speaks to reporters before boarding Air Force Two to Pakistan Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 08.57 EDT
Key events
Show key events only
Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature
Jasper Jolly
European airports have said jet fuel shortages could hit the summer holiday season, if oil supplies do not start to flow through the strait of Hormuz within the next three weeks.
Airports Council International (ACI) Europe wrote to Apostolos Tzitzikostas, the EU transport commissioner, saying the bloc is three weeks away from shortages.
The warning will raise concerns of a risk of flight or holiday cancellations if the US and Israel’s war on Iran continues. Oil prices have soared since the start of March after Iran effectively closed the strait of Hormuz, a key shipping route for exports from the Gulf, in retaliation.
Donald Trump this week announced a ceasefire, but Brent crude oil prices remained at about $96 per barrel on Friday amid concerns over whether it would hold. Before the war, oil traded at about $72.
Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun said on Friday that 13 state security personnel were killed in an Israeli strike on a governmental building in the southern city of Nabatieh.
In a statement, Aoun condemned continued Israeli attacks and said targeting state institutions would not deter Lebanon from defending its sovereignty, Reuters reported.
An AFP photographer saw extensive damage at the site, where a fire was still raging.
Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf said on Friday that two previously agreed measures, a ceasefire in Lebanon and the release of Iran’s blocked assets, must be implemented before negotiations begin.
In a post on X on Friday, Qalibaf said the steps were part of commitments made between the parties and warned that talks should not start until they were fulfilled, amid mounting disputes over ceasefire terms and continued hostilities in Lebanon.
Pope Leo has issued a thinly-veiled criticism of the US-Israeli war on Iran, saying “military action will not create space for freedom”.
Writing on X, he also said that God “does not bless any conflict”.
He said:
double quotation markGod does not bless any conflict. Anyone who is a disciple of Christ, the Prince of Peace, is never on the side of those who once wielded the sword and today drop bombs.
Military action will not create space for freedom or times of #Peace, which comes only from the patient promotion of coexistence and dialogue among peoples.
US negotiators intend to request the release of Americans detained in Iran as part of upcoming talks aimed at ending the war, according to media reports.
The Washington Post cited people briefed on the plans in its report.
Here are some of the latest images on the newswires:
A woman walks near charred cars at the site of Wednesday’s Israeli airstrike in Beirut, Lebanon. Photograph: Emilio Morenatti/APSmoke rises from Lebanon following a strike, as seen from the Israeli side of the border. Photograph: Amir Cohen/ReutersA man rides his motorbike past a billboard in Islamabad as Pakistan prepares to host the US and Iran for talks. Photograph: Waseem Khan/ReutersHouthi supporters in Sanaa, Yemen, burn the Israeli flag during a demonstration in solidarity with Iran. Photograph: Khaled Abdullah/ReutersUS vice-president JD Vance at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, to board Air Force Two for his trip to Pakistan. Photograph: Getty ImagesShareNetanyahu accuses Spain of ‘hostility’ after excluding it from Gaza truce centre
Further to the announcement by the Israeli foreign affairs ministry of Spain’s exclusion from the Civil-Military Coordination Center (see previous post), the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has accused Madrid of “hostility” towards his country.
In a video message posted today, he said:
double quotation markIsrael will not remain silent in the face of those who attack us.
Spain has defamed our heroes, the soldiers of the IDF, the soldiers of the moral army in the world.
Therefore, I have instructed the removal of the Spanish representatives from the coordination center in Kiryat Gat, after Spain has repeatedly chosen to stand against Israel.
Whoever attacks the State of Israel instead of the terrorist regimes, whoever does this, will not be our partner in the future of the region.
I am not willing to tolerate this hypocrisy and this hostility. I do not intend to allow any country to wage a diplomatic war against us without paying an immediate price for it.
ShareIsrael excludes Spain from Gaza coordination centre monitoring truce due to ‘anti-Israeli bias’
Israel’s foreign affairs ministry announced Spanish representatives will not be allowed access to the US-led centre responsible for monitoring the ceasefire in the Gaza Strip due to what it described as a “blatant anti-Israeli bias”.
In a statement on its website, the ministry said the decision was made to block Spain from participating in the Civil-Military Coordination Center (CMCC) in light of “the anti-Israel obsession of [Spanish] Prime Minister [Pedro] Sánchez’s government and its serious harm to Israeli (and also American) interests – including during the war against Iran”.
It added that the US was informed in advance of the decision.
Sánchez has arguably been the most vocal western critic of Donald Trump’s war in Iran. While most European leaders have reacted with cautious optimism at news of the ceasefire between the US and Iran, Sánchez said his government “will not applaud those who set the world on fire just because they show up with a bucket”.
In a statement, the Israeli foreign affairs minister, Gideon Saar, said: “The Sánchez government’s anti-Israel bias is so egregious that it has lost all capability to serve as a constructive actor in implementing President Trump’s peace plan and in the CMCC operating under that plan.”
ShareVance warns Iran not to ‘play’ US in Islamabad talks
US vice-president JD Vance has warned Iran not to “play” the US as he headed overseas for negotiations aimed at ending their war.
Vance, who has long been sceptical of foreign military interventions and outspoken about the prospect of sending troops into open-ended conflicts, set off Friday to lead mediated talks with Iran in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad.
Boarding Air Force Two on his way to Pakistan, the vice president said:
double quotation markWe’re looking forward to the negotiation. I think it’s gonna be positive. We’ll of course see.
He cited Trump, adding: “If the Iranians are willing to negotiate in good faith, we’re certainly willing to extend the open hand.”
But he said: “If they’re gonna try and play us, then they’re gonna find that the negotiating team is not that receptive.”
Vance also said that Trump “gave us some pretty clear guidelines” on how talks should go, but he didn’t elaborate. The vice president did not take questions from reporters traveling with him.
JD Vance speaks to reporters before boarding Air Force Two to Pakistan Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 08.57 EDT
Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem on Friday called on the Lebanese government to stop giving “free concessions” to Israel, with the two governments due to begin negotiations in Washington next week.
“We will not accept a return to the previous situation, and we call on officials to stop offering free concessions,” Qassem said in a written message broadcast on the party’s Al-Manar TV, in which he also denounced the “bloody criminality on Wednesday,” when Israeli strikes killed more than 300 people in Lebanon.