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U.S. Navy description of the file: "A video screenshot of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy (IRGCN) operating in an unsafe and unprofessional manner in close proximity to patrol coastal ship USS Sirocco (PC 6) and expeditionary fast transport USNS Choctaw County (T-EPF 2) in the Strait o
Photo: NAVCENT Public Affairs | Public domain | Wikimedia Commons

Trump Extends Iran Ceasefire As Iran Fires On Multiple Ships In Strait Of Hormuz

President Trump extended a ceasefire with Iran while Tehran fired on multiple ships in the Strait of Hormuz. The two-week ceasefire began April 8 and Trump announced an extension in mid-April as talks continued in Islamabad. Despite the extension, multiple sources report Iran fired on at least three commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz in the days after the announcement.

U.S. Central Command said 10 to 13 vessels trying to evade the blockade complied with turn-around orders, while Pentagon officials described an "ironclad" naval cordon enforced in the Gulf of Oman. President Trump said he extended the ceasefire at Pakistan leaders' request and warned Iran faces renewed strikes if talks fail, while he claimed Iran loses about $500 million a day from the blockade. Pentagon officials including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth warned Iran to "choose wisely" and said U.S. forces remain "locked and loaded" to target energy, power and dual-use infrastructure. PBS reporting put current U.S. naval strength in the region at 16 warships and said some 10,000 sailors, marines and airmen support the blockade. But internal U.S. assessments cited by CBS suggest Iran still retains about half its ballistic missiles, two-thirds of its air force and much of its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps naval arm.

Public reaction was split, with social posts praising Hegseth's tough posture while polls showed nearly 60 percent of Americans view U.S. military action in Iran as excessive. A Fox correspondent highlighted how narrowly the House rejected a war-powers resolution, 213-214, reflecting sharp congressional divides over the conflict. Coverage shifted from early optimism, when Trump said Iran "agreed to everything" and markets briefly rallied, to later reporting of Iran rejecting key concessions and firing on ships. CBS and PBS drove much of that revision by reporting Iran's public rejection of uranium handover claims and documenting ship attacks that contradicted the ceasefire's stability.

Iran War and U.S. Defense Policy Congressional Oversight and Impeachment U.S.–Iran War and Hormuz Blockade Iran War and U.S. Military Policy Pentagon and Defense Leadership
This story is compiled from 18 sources using AI-assisted curation and analysis. Original reporting is attributed below. Learn about our methodology.

📌 Key Facts

  • President Trump announced an indefinite extension of a two‑week ceasefire that began April 8, saying he acted at the request of Pakistan’s leadership so Iran’s fractured leadership could present a unified proposal; he ordered the U.S. naval blockade to continue during the extension and publicly warned that if talks fail “lots of bombs start going off,” threatening strikes on Iran’s energy, power and other infrastructure.
  • Despite the announced ceasefire extension, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard fired on at least three commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz; Iran says the U.S. naval blockade and an alleged U.S. strike on a commercial vessel violate the ceasefire and has called the blockade an “act of war.”
  • U.S. forces are enforcing a tight maritime cordon around Iranian ports and in the Gulf of Oman: CENTCOM and Pentagon officials report dozens of turn‑around orders (reported as 10–13 ships), no ship boardings yet, roughly 16 U.S. warships currently in the Middle East (11 destroyers, three amphibious assault ships, one aircraft carrier and a littoral combat ship) and more than 10,000 sailors, marines and airmen involved—described by U.S. leaders as an “ironclad” blockade using less than 10% of America’s naval power.
  • At a Pentagon briefing, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs Chair Gen. Dan Caine warned Iranian leaders to “choose wisely,” said U.S. forces are “locked and loaded,” and threatened rapid resumption of strikes if Iran rejects a deal; officials portrayed Iran’s defense industry as degraded, while internal U.S. intelligence estimates still show Iran retains significant capabilities (roughly half its ballistic missiles, about two‑thirds of its air force and much of its IRGC naval arm).
  • Iran has agreed to send a negotiating team to a second round of talks in Islamabad; Trump and U.S. negotiators (whom he defended as his “A‑Team,” including Jared Kushner) said Iran had “agreed to everything” — a claim Iran’s foreign ministry publicly rejected, insisting enriched uranium will not be transferred.
  • Congressional efforts to rein in the president’s war authority have so far failed: the House rejected Rep. Gregory Meeks’s Iran War Powers withdrawal resolution 213–214 (one vote short); Rep. Thomas Massie was the only Republican to vote for it and Rep. Jared Golden the only Democrat to vote against it, and Democrats say they will continue bringing additional War Powers measures as the 60‑day clock nears its deadline.
  • The crisis has produced mixed domestic political and economic effects: White House messaging has been inconsistent, markets and oil prices have reacted to developments in the Strait of Hormuz and statements about the ceasefire, and public opinion and lawmakers are divided—polling showed nearly 60% of Americans think U.S. action in Iran has been excessive while lawmakers from both parties dispute the legality and strategy of the campaign.

📊 Analysis & Commentary (1)

From the 2019 Impeachment to Iran
The Wall Street Journal by Holman W. Jenkins, Jr. April 21, 2026

"The WSJ opinion connects newly visible 2019‑impeachment documents to the current Iran war, arguing that Trump’s disruptive politics—and the opposition he faced—helped accelerate strategic outcomes in U.S. policy toward Iran."

📰 Source Timeline (18)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

April 22, 2026
6:26 PM
Latest on Middle East as Iran attacks at least 3 ships in Strait of Hormuz amid ceasefire
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS segment reiterates that Iran has attacked at least three commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz during an announced ceasefire.
  • Iran is explicitly framing the ongoing U.S. naval blockade of Iranian ports as a breach of the ceasefire terms.
  • The piece positions these ship attacks and Iran's ceasefire-violation claim as the key 'latest' development in the Middle East standoff.
5:53 PM
Iran fires at ships in Strait of Hormuz despite ceasefire extension
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS reports Iran attacked or fired on at least three ships in the Strait of Hormuz after President Trump announced an indefinite ceasefire extension.
  • The attacks are explicitly said to occur despite the ceasefire extension, underscoring a gap between political announcements and behavior at sea.
  • Security analyst Robert Murrett of Syracuse University's Institute for Security Policy and Law is brought in to discuss implications for the ceasefire and shipping security.
5:52 PM
Trump claims Iran 'starving for cash,' 'collapsing financially' after extending ceasefire
Fox News
New information:
  • Trump publicly extended the Iran ceasefire deadline in a Truth Social post, saying he was acting at the request of Pakistan's Field Marshal Asim Munir and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif so Iran's 'seriously fractured' leadership could present a unified proposal.
  • Trump ordered the U.S. military to continue the naval blockade of Iranian ports during the extended ceasefire while remaining 'ready and able' to attack Iran.
  • Trump claimed Iran is 'starving for cash,' 'collapsing financially,' and losing $500 million per day in oil revenue because of the U.S. blockade, and asserted that Iranian military and police are complaining they are not being paid.
  • Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi publicly denounced the blockade on X as an 'act of war' and accused the U.S. of violating the ceasefire by striking a commercial vessel and taking its crew 'hostage.'
  • The article notes Iran reportedly fired on three ships in the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday, a specific follow-on escalation tied to the blockade and ceasefire dispute.
3:44 PM
Iran more capable than Trump admin. is publicly acknowledging, sources say
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • Provides internal U.S. estimates that Iran retains about half its ballistic missiles, two‑thirds of its air force, and a majority of its IRGC naval arm, indicating Iran remains far from the 'knocked out' force suggested in some prior public threats.
  • Highlights the gap between President Trump's past claims that U.S. and allied strikes had 'taken out' Iran's navy and air force and internal intelligence assessments that still rate Iran as capable of inflicting significant damage.
April 21, 2026
3:45 AM
Iran to Attend Pakistan Peace Talks
The Wall Street Journal by Dov Lieber
New information:
  • WSJ reports Trump has warned that if Iran does not make a deal, U.S. strikes would knock out Iran's bridges and power plants.
  • The new threat is issued as Iran prepares to attend a second round of talks in Islamabad, adding pressure ahead of negotiations.
  • The article confirms that Iran will send a negotiating team to Pakistan, altering the context in which Trump's latest threat lands.
12:40 AM
Mixed signals from Trump on state of talks with Iran
https://www.facebook.com/CBSEveningNews/
New information:
  • CBS segment specifically pins the timeline of Trump's 'agreed to everything' remarks to Friday and his 'lots of bombs start going off' warning to Monday.
  • The piece reinforces that Trump accused Iran of violating the ceasefire by Monday, framing the tougher rhetoric as a direct response to that alleged violation.
  • Reporter Ed O'Keefe is the on-air correspondent, adding CBS attribution but not substantially new factual claims beyond wording already captured in the existing story.
April 20, 2026
5:46 PM
How Trump's messaging on Iran has shifted since saying they "agreed to everything"
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • On Friday afternoon April 17, in a phone interview with CBS's Weijia Jiang, Trump said Iran had 'agreed to everything,' including letting the U.S. 'take' its enriched uranium and stopping support for Hezbollah and Hamas.
  • Within hours, Iran's Foreign Ministry publicly rejected that claim, stating in translation that enriched uranium is 'as sacred to us as Iranian soil' and would not be transferred anywhere under any circumstances.
  • Friday evening in Phoenix, Trump told reporters he did not think there were 'too many significant differences' with Iran, despite Iran saying major gaps remained.
  • The article documents that on Saturday Trump largely avoided Iran questions, telling reporters to 'get out' when asked about Iran's Revolutionary Guard firing on ships, then spending the afternoon at his Virginia golf club.
  • Early Sunday April 19, Trump told Fox's Trey Yingst that if Iran does not sign the deal 'the whole country is getting blown up' and called talks in Pakistan Iran's 'last chance.'
  • CBS highlights contradictory White House messaging on the Islamabad delegation's timing: Trump told the New York Post the delegation would arrive Monday night, while a White House official later said it had not yet left and only 'plans to travel... soon.'
  • The piece explicitly ties Friday's optimistic comments to a brief market rally and oil-price drop after Iran declared the Strait of Hormuz open, then contrasts that with Iran's hard public rejection of uranium transfer.
1:56 PM
Trump tells PBS News that 'lots of bombs start going off' if Iran ceasefire expires
PBS News by Liz Landers
New information:
  • Trump tells PBS News that if the ceasefire with Iran expires Tuesday evening, 'then lots of bombs start going off.'
  • He reiterates that the U.S. negotiating objective in Islamabad is that 'Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon' and frames it as the sole issue.
  • Trump personally defends Jared Kushner's role on the Islamabad negotiating team despite Kushner's Middle East business ties, calling him part of his 'A-Team.'
  • Trump publicly disputes Secretary Chris Wright's CNN comment that gas may not drop below $3 until later in the year, asserting prices will 'come roaring down' if the war ends on his terms.
April 18, 2026
11:00 AM
Sen John Fetterman pledges to be 'last man standing' in the Democratic Party in support of Israel
Fox News
New information:
  • Sen. John Fetterman told Fox News he is prepared to be the 'last man standing' in the Democratic Party in support of Israel.
  • Fetterman said 'No, absolutely, absolutely not' when asked if Israel had done anything wrong in recent weeks, adding 'Israel's done what was necessary.'
  • He praised President Trump’s Operation Epic Fury and said eliminating Iranian leadership is a 'strong development' that has 'made the world safer.'
  • Fetterman criticized continued Democratic efforts to pass an Iran War Powers Resolution more than 45 days into the conflict, questioning why they would 'be voting every day' when Trump says the war is close to ending.
  • He framed both America and Israel as 'the force of good' and urged people with large platforms to direct criticism toward Iran instead.
8:00 AM
Dems sidestep past ‘refuse illegal orders’ demands as they challenge Trump’s Iran war authority
Fox News
New information:
  • Fox article foregrounds that several Democratic lawmakers with military backgrounds had previously urged service members to "refuse illegal orders" in general terms (Slotkin, Kelly, Deluzio, Goodlander, Houlahan, Crow) and are now silent on applying that to Trump’s Iran war.
  • Quotes fresh member reactions framing the Iran conflict as an "illegal war" (Blumenthal) while explicitly saying troops are not to blame and are "following orders" (Soto).
  • Names Rep. Jonathan Jackson calling the Iran conflict "a war" rather than an "excursion" and directly disputing Trump’s characterization.
  • Adds Sen. John Fetterman’s on‑record defense that "none of this has been illegal" and that he is "the only Democrat" supporting Operation Epic Fury, sharpening the intra‑party split on legality.
  • Reiterates that the House Iran War Powers withdrawal resolution failed 213‑214 and notes backers cite the 60‑day War Powers clock, while opponents say operations have not yet crossed that mark.
April 16, 2026
11:40 PM
House rejects effort to withdraw U.S. forces from Iran war as GOP lawmakers stick with Trump
PBS News by Kevin Freking, Associated Press
New information:
  • Confirms the House vote tally on the Iran War Powers resolution as 213–214, with the measure failing by one vote.
  • Identifies Rep. Gregory Meeks as the sponsor/lead advocate of the House resolution and quotes his warning that Congress is 'standing at the edge of a cliff.'
  • Names Rep. Thomas Massie as the only Republican voting for the withdrawal resolution and Rep. Jared Golden as the only Democrat voting against it.
  • Specifies GOP messaging comparing Trump’s Iran war powers fight to Biden’s 2024 strikes on Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen, with Rep. Brian Mast calling Democrats hypocritical.
  • Notes Democrats’ plan to continue bringing additional War Powers votes in coming weeks and reiterates that the 60‑day War Powers clock on the Iran conflict expires at the end of April, with a possible 30‑day extension.
9:30 PM
Thursday’s Mini-Report, 4.16.26
MS NOW by Steve Benen
New information:
  • Confirms that on April 16, 2026 the GOP‑led House again rejected a war‑powers resolution to curtail Trump’s Iran war authority by a 213–214 vote.
  • Notes this was the second failed war‑powers attempt in roughly six weeks since Trump launched the attack on Iran, with an even tighter margin than the prior vote.
4:11 PM
Latest effort to rein in Trump on Iran falls short in House vote
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • House rejected a Gregory Meeks war‑powers resolution 213–214, with one member voting present.
  • Only one Republican backed the resolution (Rep. Thomas Massie), while Rep. Warren Davidson voted present.
  • Three Democrats who had opposed an earlier March war‑powers measure (Henry Cuellar, Greg Landsman, Juan Vargas) switched to support this latest effort.
  • A parallel Democratic‑led war‑powers resolution in the Senate also failed earlier in the week with just one Republican vote.
  • Some Republicans signal they may reconsider their votes if the conflict goes beyond the War Powers Resolution’s 60‑day limit on May 1.
4:08 PM
House rejects Democrat attempt to limit Trump's Iran war powers
Fox News
New information:
  • House defeats Rep. Gregory Meeks’s war powers resolution to end hostilities with Iran without congressional approval on a 213–214 vote.
  • Rep. Jared Golden is the only Democrat to oppose the resolution; Rep. Thomas Massie is the only Republican to back it; Rep. Warren Davidson votes present.
  • Article reports CENTCOM has turned back 13 vessels from Iranian ports under the blockade, adding a specific operational tally to prior descriptions of the ‘ironclad’ blockade.
  • Describes Democrats’ earlier failed attempt to pass a war powers measure by unanimous consent during a pro forma House session and notes continuing weekly war‑powers push in the Senate.
  • Trump tells FOX Business the conflict is ‘very close to over’ as the U.S. maintains a two‑week ceasefire and floats a second round of U.S.–Iran peace talks.
1:38 PM
WATCH: Hegseth says Americans 'see the success' in Iran
PBS News by Associated Press
New information:
  • Hegseth claimed at the Pentagon that Americans 'see the success' of the Iran war and accused the press of only seeking the negative, while PBS immediately contrasted this with an AP‑NORC poll showing nearly 60% of Americans think U.S. action in Iran has been excessive and 45% are extremely or very worried about affording gas.
  • Hegseth asserted Iran is moving its military assets but 'cannot rebuild' and 'no longer have a viable defense industry' almost seven weeks into the war, warning the U.S. is 'locked and loaded' on Iran’s dual‑use infrastructure, power generation and energy industry.
  • He said the Navy is using 'less than 10% of America's naval power' to enforce the blockade, specifying there are currently 16 warships in the Middle East (11 destroyers, three amphibious assault ships, one aircraft carrier and a littoral combat ship) out of roughly 300 total warships.
  • Joint Chiefs Chair Gen. Dan Caine likened blockade operations to 'driving a sports car through a supermarket parking lot on a payday weekend' with 'thousands of kids' present, said more than 10,000 sailors, marines and airmen are enforcing the cordon, and reported that 13 ships have turned around after warnings and that no vessels have yet been boarded.
  • Caine publicly warned that U.S. forces 'will actively pursue any Iranian flagged vessel or any vessel attempting to provide material support to Iran' anywhere in the world and told such ships to 'turn around or prepare' for consequences.
12:14 PM
Hegseth warns Iranian leaders to 'choose wisely' on deal with US: 'We are locked and loaded'
Fox News
New information:
  • At a Thursday Pentagon press briefing, War Secretary Pete Hegseth warned Iranian leaders to 'choose wisely' on accepting a peace deal with the U.S.
  • Hegseth stated that the U.S. military is 'locked and loaded' and specifically threatened strikes on Iran’s energy, power and other infrastructure if Iran 'chooses poorly.'
  • He asserted that Iran is 'digging out of bombed out and devastated facilities,' has 'no defense industry' and 'no ability to replenish' missiles or launchers, while the U.S. can fully reconstitute its capabilities.
  • Hegseth framed U.S. naval operations as an 'ironclad blockade' and said CENTCOM Commander Adm. Brad Cooper is postured to restart combat operations quickly if Iran rejects a deal.
11:59 AM
Watch Live: Hegseth, Caine update on Iran war
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs Chair Gen. Dan Caine are holding a live Pentagon news conference early Thursday specifically on the Iran war.
  • The briefing occurs about eight days into a two‑week ceasefire that began April 8 and as negotiations to extend it are unresolved.
  • A senior U.S. official told CBS that the U.S. has not formally agreed to extend the ceasefire, though discussions with Iran and intermediaries continue.
  • U.S. Central Command reports that 10 ships attempting to evade the U.S. blockade of Iranian ports have complied with turn‑around orders; the blockade is being enforced in the Gulf of Oman.
  • Trump has publicly said the conflict is 'very close to over' and has suggested a new round of direct U.S.–Iran peace talks could be imminent.
  • Trump also claimed on social media that Israeli and Lebanese leaders will speak Thursday, against a backdrop of Israeli operations in southern Lebanon that have killed more than 2,100 people, according to Lebanon’s health ministry.
April 15, 2026
4:58 PM
House Democrats file articles of impeachment against Hegseth
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/