15.2 C
London
Monday, May 4, 2026

LIVE: Ayatollah warns ‘only place’ for US is ‘at bottom of waters’

Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei has declared the ‘only place’ for the US in the Persian Gulf is at the ‘bottom of its waters’ as Tehran insists Donald Trump’s naval blockade is ‘doomed to fail’.

Iran’s Supreme Leader claimed a new chapter for the Gulf and Strait of Hormuz has been taking shape without America following what he described as the US’s ‘shameful failure’ over the waterway.

In a published written message to commemorate National Persian Gulf Day, Khamenei said: ‘We are “fellow-destined” with our neighbors in the waters of the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman, and the foreigners who wreak their greedy havoc from thousands of miles away have no place there, except at the bottom of its waters.’

It comes as the US military briefs Trump on new plans for potential strikes on Iran aimed at ending the stand-off which has resulted in the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping.

Overnight, Axios reported that CENTCOM chief Admiral Brad Cooper is slated to brief Trump on how the US may go about undertaking new military actions with an aim of either breaking the negotiations deadlock or deliver a killing blow to end the war.

It comes as the price of oil surged past $125 per barrel in overnight trading, the highest level since Russia invaded Ukraine.

Khamenei: Only place for Americans in Persian Gulf is at ‘bottom of its waters’

Mojtaba Khamenei has said the only place for Americans in the Persian Gulf ‘is at the bottom of its waters’, according to state television.

In his statement, which has now been published on Telegram, he said:

We are ‘fellow-destined’ with our neighbors in the waters of the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman, and the foreigners who wreak their greedy havoc from thousands of miles away have no place there, except at the bottom of its waters.

Khamenei, who hasn’t been seen or heard since he was appointed the supreme leader following the death of his father Ali, also claimed Tehran’s ‘new management’ of the Strait of Hormuz would bring ‘progress’ and economic benefits

Khamenei said Iran would eliminate ‘the enemy’s abuses of the waterway’.

Khamenei blames US ‘puppet bases’ for Middle East insecurities

In his statement, Khamenei has also blamed American military presence in the Middle East for insecurity.

He said:

It has been proven … that the presence of American foreigners and their nesting and nesting in the lands of the Persian Gulf is the most important factor in insecurity in the region.

America’s puppet bases do not even have the strength and capacity to ensure their own security, let alone that there is any hope that America will provide security to its dependents and American-loving people in the region.

Iran’s Supreme Leader declares ‘new chapter’ for Strait of Hormuz

FILE PHOTO: Iran's new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, the second son of late Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, attends a meeting in Tehran, Iran, October 13, 2024. Hamed Jafarnejad/ISNA/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS PICTURE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY/File Photo

Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has said a new chapter for the Gulf and Strait of Hormuz has been taking shape following the US’s ‘shameful failure’ over the waterway.

In a published written message to commemorate National Persian Gulf Day, which celebrates the expulsion of Portuguese forces form the island of Hormuz in 1622, Khamenei said:

Today, two months after the world’s biggest campaign and aggression in the region and America’s shameful failure in its own plan, a new chapter is emerging in the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz.

Lebanon president condemns ‘Israeli violations’ of ceasefire

Smoke rises from the southern Lebanese area of Marjeyoun

A photograph taken from the southern Lebanese area of Marjeyoun shows the smoke traces of Israeli shelling as it targets the village of Yohmor on April 30, 2026. Lebanon's President urged Israel to fully implement a ceasefire before beginning direct talks, after Israeli strikes killed more than 20 people in the last two days. Israel has been fighting Hezbollah since early March, sending troops into south Lebanon to battle the Iran-backed militant group, with the violence ongoing despite a shaky April 17 truce. (Photo by AFP via Getty Images)

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has condemned what he described as Israel’s continued violations of the ceasefire.

Speaking today, Aoun is calling for international pressure on Israel to stop strikes on civilians and paramedics.

He slammed the ‘continuing Israeli violations’ in south Lebanon, saying they were occurring ‘despite the ceasefire, as do demolitions of homes and places of worship, while the number of killed and wounded rises day after day’.

‘Pressure must be exerted on Israel to ensure it respects international laws and conventions and ceases targeting civilians, paramedics, civil defence, and humanitarian health and relief organisations,’ he added in a statement, as the fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah nears the two-week mark.

Iran’s revised peace proposal to come tomorrow – report

CNN is reporting a revised peace proposal put forward by Iran could arrive tomorrow.

Sources close to mediators working on the plan say the new plan could come after a previous one was dismissed.

Top US officials, including Vice President JD Vance, twice turned back last week from trips to Pakistan to negotiate with Iran with Washington claiming they do not know who is speaking for the country

On Wednesday, Trump said negotiations to end the war are taking place ‘telephonically’ because ‘we’re not flying anymore’.

Trump says ‘great friend’ King Charles ‘would have helped us with Iran’

by Perkin Amalaraj, Foreign News Reporter

Donald Trump has claimed that his ‘great friend’ King Charles ‘would have helped us with Iran if it was up to him.’

In a fresh swipe at Sir Keir Starmer for not sending British military assets to the Middle East to assist his war against Iran, Trump said: ‘The King is fantastic. We spent a lot of time together.

‘We talked a lot. We talked about this also. He loves his country, and he’s a great King. And he’s a great friend.

‘I think if he were doing that, if that were up to him, he would have probably helped us with Iran.’

Trump added that was ‘very disappointed’ in NATO after the US ‘asked them to do some things about Ukraine and Iran.’

In a speech on Tuesday night during a state banquet, Trump claimed that King Charles agreed with him that Iran should never be allowed nuclear weapons.

World facing ‘major energy and economic challenge’

The world is facing a ‘major energy and economic challenge’ as oil prices have soared in the wake of the war in the Middle East, International Energy Agency chief Fatih Birol has said.

‘The world is facing the biggest energy crisis in history,’ Birol said at a high-level meeting on the energy transition at IEA headquarters in Paris, adding that oil prices were ‘putting a lot of pressure in many countries’.

Hezbollah unleashes new weapon against Israel in latest round of fighting

Hezbollah has launched a new weapon against Israel in the latest round of fighting.

Small drones controlled with fiber-optic cables the width of dental floss that are capable of avoiding electronic detection have been deployed by the Iran-aligned militants.

These drones – used widely in the war in Ukraine – are small, hard to track and potentially lethal.

Many drones are susceptible to electronic jamming by air defenses. Jamming can cause a drone to crash or return to its point of origin.

But fiber-optic drones are not controlled remotely. They have a thin cable that connects an operator directly to the drone, making it impossible to electronically jam.

The drones are not infallible because the wind – or other drones – can cause the cables to tangle.

Robert Tollast, a drone expert and researcher at the Royal United Services Institute in London, said the drones can be ‘absolutely deadly’ as he explained how they can fly low and creep up on a target.

Trump reveals explosive secret call with Putin where he REJECTED Iran deal

FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump speaks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, as they meet to negotiate for an end to the war in Ukraine, at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska, U.S., August 15, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo

by Phillip Nieto, US Political Reporter

Donald Trump said he rebuffed Vladimir Putin’s offer to help resolve the Iran war, while urging the Russian leader to accept a ceasefire in Ukraine.

Trump held a private call with Putin on Wednesday to discuss tying the end of the Iran war to Russia’s conflict with Ukraine.

‘He told me he’d like to be involved with the enrichment if he can help us get it. I said, “I’d much rather have you be involved with ending the war with Ukraine,”‘ Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Wednesday.

The President went on to claim the rest of the conversation with Putin was ‘very good’ and said he suggested Putin consider ‘a little bit of a ceasefire’ with Ukraine.

Iran war sparks rice shortage fears

Farmers thresh harvested rice at a field in Denpasar on Indonesia's resort island of Bali on April 30, 2026. (Photo by SONNY TUMBELAKA / AFP via Getty Images)

Rice supplies are expected to fall this year as farmers cut planting acreage across Asia because of fertilizer shortages and soaring fuel costs from the Iran war.

Rice is central to global food security, and even modest supply disruptions can ripple through countries, lifting prices and straining household budgets, particularly among price-sensitive consumers in Asia and Africa.

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization in April forecast rice output would expand by 2 per cent to a record high in 2025/26.

The effects of the Iran war are impacting farmers in top exporters Thailand and Vietnam as well as the import-reliant Philippines and Indonesia, growers and traders said. The war has cut fuel and fertilizer flows through the Strait of Hormuz, a key chokepoint that connects the Gulf to global markets.

‘Farmers have already started planting rice in some countries and are using fewer inputs because prices have gone up,’ said Maximo Torero, chief economist at the UN FAO.

‘We are going to see a tighter global supply situation in the second half of the year and early next year.’

US makes new efforts to unblock Strait of Hormuz

Ships and boats stranded in the Strait of Hormuz

Ships and boats in the Strait of Hormuz, Musandam, Oman, April 29, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer

The US is pushing for a new international coalition to restart shipping in the Strait of Hormuz as talks with Tehran stall, US outlets are reporting.

The State Department sent an internal cable to US embassies calling on diplomats to convince governments around the world to join the ‘Maritime Freedom Construct,’ a US-led bloc to share information, coordinate diplomatically, and enforce sanctions, the Wall Street Journal has reported.

Iran has sought to extract a price for being attacked by exerting control over the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which one-fifth of global oil typically transits.

As oil prices remain elevated for weeks, Trump has called on allies to unblock the strait, saying last month that ‘this should have always been a team effort.’

The coalition will see the State Department serving as a ‘diplomatic operations hub’ and the US Central Command providing ‘real-time maritime domain awareness,’ the Journal reported, citing the cable sent on Tuesday.

Iran threatens to sink US ships if blockade continues

Iran’s military has threatened to ‘respond’ if the US blockade continues with Tehran warning American ships could be sunk.

On Wednesday, the military adviser to Iran’s supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei reiterated the warning, without elaborating.

‘We will not tolerate the naval blockade. If it continues, Iran will respond,’ Mohsen Rezaei, a former commander-in-chief of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards who was named as a military adviser by Khamenei in March told state television.

He also warned against a new round of fighting between the US and Iran, saying it could possibly see US ships sunk and ‘its soldiers will be killed.’

‘If the US starts another war, it should expect that we take a large number of them prisoner,’ he added.

Key Updates

  • Khamenei: Only place for Americans in Persian Gulf is at ‘bottom of its waters’

  • Iran’s Supreme Leader declares ‘new chapter’ for Strait of Hormuz

  • Iran’s revised peace proposal to come tomorrow – report

  • Trump says ‘great friend’ King Charles ‘would have helped us with Iran’

  • Trump reveals explosive secret call with Putin where he REJECTED Iran deal

  • Iran threatens to sink US ships if blockade continues

  • Iran’s President says Trump’s naval blockade is ‘doomed to fail’

  • Trump threatens to pull US troops from Germany amid spat with Merz

  • Trump warns Iran blockade could last months

  • Trump claims King Charles would’ve helped US with Iran

  • Trump considers fresh Iran strikes

  • Oil soars past $125 a barrel

TOP STORIES

Hot this week

Diana’s ex-hairdresser condemns ‘evil’ comments about Kate’s hair

Princess Diana's former hairdresser has condemned 'nasty' comments made about the Princess of Wales 's hair - as she stepped out with her newly blonde tresses.

The unusual breakfast request Princess Lilibet asks Meghan Markle for

Meghan Markle revealed her children's favourite meals and that she 'doesn't like baking' on the second season of her lifestyle show With Love, Meghan.

Experts reveal how many tins of tuna is safe to eat a week

The NHS advises people to eat at least two portions of fish a week, yet a recent investigation revealed toxic metals, including mercury, could be lurking in cans of tinned tuna sold in the UK.

Some people DO see ghosts – and medics say there’s an explanation

An astonishing third of people in the UK and almost half of Americans say they believe in ghosts, spirits and other types of paranormal activity.

Prince Philip’s nickname only his nearest and dearest could call him

From 'Lillibet' to 'Grandpa Wales', members of the Royal Family are known to go by many nicknames.

Judge slammed for ‘joke’ apology to Trump shooter

A liberal federal judge in DC has sparked outrage after apologizing to Donald Trump's alleged would-be assassin for restrictions placed on him behind bars.

Madeleine McCann suspect Brueckner ‘should face trial in Britain’

Detectives from the Metropolitan Police are reportedly pushing for Christian Brueckner to stand trial in Britain for the abduction and murder of Madeleine McCann.

Stars getting ready for the Met Gala as Irina Shayk wears a face mask

Heidi Klum was seen walking her dog in NYC on the morning of the Met Gala before she got her nails painted white then zipped herself up in an oxygen chamber.

Video of dog inside Gordon Ramsay restaurant sparks online debate

Footage taken inside Gordon Ramsay Street Pizza's Battersea location and posted to TikTok shows a person holding a sausage dog on a lead over the training pad in the middle of the dining area.

Met Gala shock guest watch: All the stars tipped to crash red carpet

The 2026 Met Gala is already shaping up to be one of the most talked-about in the event's history, with a star-studded guest list and whispers of jaw-dropping surprise arrivals still to come.

Britney Spears pleads guilty in DUI case after taking plea deal

The 44-year-old pop star did not appear in person in front of a judge weeks after being taken into custody on March 4, but entered a guilty plea via her lawyer Michael A. Goldstein.

Fears for Rudy Giuliani as his business partner provides diagnosis

Hospitalized former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani has come down with pneumonia, a business partner has revealed.

Stars getting ready for the Met Gala as Irina Shayk wears a face mask

Heidi Klum was seen walking her dog in NYC on the morning of the Met Gala before she got her nails painted white then zipped herself up in an oxygen chamber.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img