Nayera Abdallah, Elwely Elwelly and Idrees AliUpdated May 11, 2026 — 4:58pm,first published May 10, 2026 — 4:30pmDubai/Washington: US President Donald Trump’s swift rejection of Iran’s response to a US peace proposal sent oil prices surging on Monday amid concerns the 10-week-old conflict will drag on, keeping shipping through the Strait of Hormuz paralysed.Days after the US floated an offer in the hopes of reopening negotiations, Iran on Sunday (US time) released a response focused on ending the war on all fronts, especially Lebanon, where US ally Israel is fighting Iran-backed Hezbollah militants.A poster in Tehran depicts Donald Trump with his mouth gagged by a blue ribbon in the shape of the Strait of Hormuz.Getty ImagesTehran included a demand for compensation for war damage and emphasised Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz, Iranian state TV said.It also called on the US to end its naval blockade, guarantee no further attacks, lift sanctions and end a US ban on Iranian oil sales, according to the semi-official Tasnim news agency.Within hours, Trump dismissed Iran’s proposal with a post on social media.“I don’t like it – TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE,” Trump wrote on Truth Social, without giving further detail.The US had proposed an end to fighting before starting talks on more contentious issues, including Iran’s nuclear program.Following Trump’s rejection of its demands, Tehran said on Monday it believed its proposal to end the war was “generous and responsible”.“Our demand is legitimate: demanding an end to the war, lifting the [US] blockade and piracy, and releasing Iranian assets that have been unjustly frozen in banks due to US pressure,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said.“Safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz and establishing security in the region and Lebanon were other demands of Iran, which are considered a generous and responsible offer for regional security.”Oil prices jumped more than $US4 a barrel following news of the continued stalemate that leaves the narrow Strait of Hormuz largely closed. Before the war began on February 28, the waterway carried one-fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas flows, and has emerged as one of the central pressure points in the war.While traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is at a trickle compared to before the war, shipping data on Kpler and LSEG showed three tankers laden with crude exited the waterway last week, with trackers switched off to avoid Iranian attack.Surveys show the war is unpopular with US voters facing sharply higher gasoline prices less than six months before nationwide elections that will determine whether Trump’s Republican party retains control of Congress.The US has also found little international support, with NATO allies refusing calls to send ships to open the Strait of Hormuz without a full peace deal and an internationally mandated mission.It is not clear what fresh diplomatic or military steps may be ahead.Trump is expected to arrive in Beijing on Wednesday night (AEST). With mounting pressure to draw a line under the war and the global energy crisis it has ignited, Iran is among the topics Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are set to discuss.Trump has been leaning on China to use its influence to push Tehran to make a deal with Washington.Addressing whether combat operations against Iran were over, Trump said in remarks aired on Sunday: “They are defeated, but that doesn’t mean they’re done.”Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the war was not over because there was “more work to be done” to remove enriched uranium from Iran, dismantle enrichment sites and address Iran’s proxies and ballistic missile capabilities.The best way to remove the enriched uranium would be through diplomacy, Netanyahu said in an interview that aired Sunday on CBS News’ 60 Minutes. But he did not rule out removing it by force.Iran’s President, Masoud Pezeshkian, said in a social media post that Iran would “never bow down to the enemy” and would “defend national interests with strength”.Despite diplomatic efforts to break a deadlock, the threat to shipping lanes and the economies of the region remains high. Recent days have seen the biggest flare-ups in fighting in and around the strait since a ceasefire began in early April.On Sunday, the United Arab Emirates said it intercepted two drones coming from Iran, while Qatar condemned a drone attack that hit a cargo ship coming from Abu Dhabi in its waters. Kuwait said its air defences had dealt with hostile drones that entered its airspace.Clashes have also continued in southern Lebanon between Israel and Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah, despite a US-brokered ceasefire announced on April 16.An end to hostilities with Iran would not necessarily bring an end to the war in Lebanon, Netanyahu said in the 60 Minutes interview, in which he also said Israeli planners had underestimated Iran’s ability to choke off traffic through the Hormuz Strait.“It took a while for them to understand how big that risk is, which they understand now,” he said.ReutersGet a note directly from our foreign correspondents on what’s making headlines around the world. Sign up for our weekly What in the World newsletter.More:Middle East at warIranUSABahrainUKLebanonDonald TrumpFrom our partners
‘I don’t like it’: Trump blasts Iran’s ‘unacceptable’ response to US proposal to end war
Tehran focused on ending the war on all fronts, especially in Lebanon, and safe shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, but it did not indicate how or when the vital waterway might reopen.











