-
Salt and Kohli in the runs as Bengaluru beat Mumbai in IPL
-
Rosenior admits Chelsea in 'difficult place'
-
Man City must respect Arsenal in title showdown: Guardiola
-
McIlroy begins Masters final round as repeat drama looms
-
Sinner sinks Alcaraz to win Monte Carlo Masters, returns to No.1
-
Stuttgart hammer Hamburg to go third in Bundesliga
-
De Zerbi suffers debut defeat as Spurs crisis deepens, City rampant
-
Delays mar voting as crisis-hit Peru picks ninth president in decade
-
Man City rout Chelsea to close gap on leaders Arsenal
-
Lille ease back into third in Ligue 1 with Toulouse win
-
After unsuccessful US-Iran talks, what next for Trump?
-
Galactic 'Super Mario' rules N. America box office for second week
-
Koch pips Vos to win Paris-Roubaix Femmes
-
Trump orders US Navy to block Hormuz Strait after Iran talks fail
-
Spurs win would 'change everything': De Zerbi
-
Holders Bordeaux-Begles see off Toulouse to reach Champions Cup semis
-
De Zerbi suffers debut defeat as Spurs crisis deepens
-
Sinner beats Alcaraz to win Monte Carlo Masters, returns to No.1
-
'No other way': Mideast prepares for more fighting as talks fail
-
Napoli draw at Parma gives Inter chance to put one hand on Serie A title
-
At US-Iran talks, Pakistan's field marshal takes centre stage
-
Spurs rue bad luck as relegation fears deepen
-
Napoli's title defence dented by draw at Parma
-
Andreeva opens clay court season with title in Linz
-
Van Aert finally wins Paris-Roubaix cycling Monument
-
Trump orders US Navy to block Hormuz after Iran talks fail
-
France scrum-half Lucu extends Bordeaux deal to 2029
-
McIlroy fights for repeat as last-round Masters drama begins
-
Buttler keeps form as Gujarat ease past Lucknow in IPL
-
Trump orders US naval blockade of Strait of Hormuz
-
Polls open as Peru picks ninth president in a decade
-
US-Iran talks fail as world urges respect for truce
-
Ukraine, Russia accuse each other of Easter truce violations
-
Cape Town mayor elected to lead S.Africa's second-largest party
-
Justin Bieber reconnects with fans on Coachella's second day
-
Crippa, Demise claim Paris marathon victories
-
Union Berlin appoint first female coach after Baumgart sacking
-
Legendary Indian singer Asha Bhosle dies aged 92
-
Finance minister favourite as Benin votes for president
-
Imagine Dragons frontman chases childhood video game dream
-
Teenage sprint star Gout powers to 200m win in blistering 19.67sec
-
China's energy strategy pays off as Mideast war cramps supplies: analysts
-
Hungarians vote in closely watched election, with Orban's rule on line
-
Mideast war takes a bite out of Filipino street food vendors
-
Crime-weary Peru votes for ninth president in a decade
-
Vance says talks failed to reach deal with Iran on ending Mideast war
-
New York's teen spirit frustrates Messi, Miami
-
Vance says talks failed to reach agreement with Iran
-
'Stop hiring humans'? Silicon Valley confronts AI job panic
-
Force rue missed opportunities after another Super Rugby defeat
After unsuccessful US-Iran talks, what next for Trump?
The failure of US-Iran peace talks has left President Donald Trump with several unpalatable options, as analysts say his order to blockade the strategic Strait of Hormuz could further complicate his next move.
Any hopes that US Vice President JD Vance would emerge from the marathon day of negotiations with top Iranian officials with a deal to end a war that has rippled across the Middle East were dashed when he left Pakistan emptyhanded.
Protracted talks would undermine Trump's insistence that Iran has "no cards" left to play, while ramping up military action would expose US forces to heightened risk and could alienate voters -- already angry with surging gas prices -- ahead of midterm elections.
And the blockade of the strait through which a fifth of the world's oil moves would do little to ease global economic jitters.
For Brian Katulis, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, Trump's propensity to talk off the cuff and make threats -- what he called the president's "carnival barker" style -- leaves his close aides scrambling to chart a path forward.
"He may be simply buying more time to move in more military assets or because he doesn't know what else to do. I wouldn't call it a strategy; it is a military-centric approach without strategy," Katulis told AFP.
Shibley Telhami, a professor of peace and development at the University of Maryland and a fellow at the Brookings Institution think tank, says the threat of a blockade was "bewildering and seems self-defeating."
"Iran already has no trust in Trump," Telhami told AFP. "Hard to understate what this makes of what's left of America's global credibility."
- 'Untrustworthy and duplicitous' -
Iran's powerful Revolutionary Guards on Sunday pledged that Tehran's enemies would be trapped in a "deadly vortex" if they were to make a wrong move in the strait.
Danny Citrinowicz, a fellow at Israel's Institute for National Security Studies, said a naval blockade would indeed expose US forces to increased risk.
"There is little reason to believe that a blockade would force Iranian capitulation. If anything, Iran's demonstrated resilience thus far suggests the opposite," Citrinowicz wrote on X.
"Iran's geographic scale and military capabilities mean that sustaining such an operation would demand substantial and prolonged allocation of American resources."
And such a prolonged military engagement may not sit well with Americans who say they are worried and stressed about the conflict, which began in late February.
A CBS News poll published Sunday revealed that worry, stress and anger far outweigh safety and confidence, when those polled were asked how they feel about the war.
More than 80 percent of respondents said the United States should seek to reopen the strait and improve global access to oil, which would bring gas prices down, and make sure that the Iranian people are "free."
But fewer than 10 percent said they believed those goals had been achieved.
"I don't see how, 40-plus days into this war, that we are safer, that our allies are safer. I'm not even sure Israel is safer," Democratic US Senator Mark Warner said Sunday on CNN's "State of the Union" talk show.
"I don't understand how blockading the strait is going to somehow push the Iranians into opening it. I don't get the connection there."
So if the blockade is not an answer, what about more negotiations?
Democratic Senator Tim Kaine suggested that would not be an easy path, given that Trump removed the US from a 2015 accord reached by Tehran and world powers on restricting its nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief.
"This is not going to be an easy negotiation because the last negotiation that led to a control of Iran's nuclear program, the US made the decision to tear it up and walk away from the deal," Kaine told CNN.
Katulis echoed that idea.
"Iranian officials are also untrustworthy and duplicitous, but the Trump administration is providing the mirror image of that," he said.
"If I were an Iranian official leaving Islamabad, I would wonder if I am back on the Israeli kill list."
T.Sanchez--AT