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Just 24 hours after the ceasefire, the Strait of Hormuz is closed again! Israel's move has completely trapped the United States.
The global energy market just took a breath, only to be thrown back into chaos in less than 24 hours.
On April 9th, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard suddenly ordered: block the Strait of Hormuz.
Maritime tracking systems captured a shocking scene—the oil tanker "Ouralova" was heading toward the strait's exit, but suddenly veered sharply near the Oman coast, executing a 180-degree "death turn," and sped back into the Persian Gulf's depths.
This arc directly shattered the two-week ceasefire window carefully negotiated by Pakistani Prime Minister Shabaz.
The trigger was Israel's large-scale airstrikes on Lebanon on the 8th, which resulted in 254 deaths and 1,165 injuries.
Iran was furious: the first of the 10 ceasefire terms in US-Iran negotiations was a ceasefire in Lebanon, but Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu claimed to support the ceasefire in words, then added a "reservation"—excluding Lebanon.
This effectively tore up the agreement.
Iran's response was simple and brutal: you attack my allies, I will lock down your oil routes.
Oil prices surged accordingly.
U.S. Vice President Vance was frantic: the prerequisite for a ceasefire is unconditional opening of the strait!
The White House also declared this as a bottom line.
But the problem is—America can't control Israel at all.
The more severe threat is still ahead.
Former Director of the U.S. Counterterrorism Center Joe Kent warned: Israel's true intention has never been a ceasefire, but to use the U.S. to completely overthrow the Iranian regime.
Netanyahu's "verbal promise" is just a delaying tactic; once Mossad locates high-level Iranian targets, they could be targeted for elimination at any time, dragging the U.S. back into war.
In summary: Pakistan's negotiation table isn't even set, but Israel's bombs are already arriving.
Iran is holding the strait hostage, and the U.S. is being roasted on the fire by its allies.
The so-called 14-day peace window may just be a tactical pause before the next big war.
No one should laugh at anyone— in this game of chess, the most dangerous player is never Iran, but that "little brother" trying to drag the U.S. into the water completely.