The political drama culminates with the IRGC announcing that the
Strait of Hormuz is once again restricted.A gardener waters plants in front of portraits of children killed in a strike on a school in the southern Iranian city of Minab, at Tajrish Square in
Tehran, April 16, 2026 [AFP]Published On 18 Apr 2026Tehran,
Iran –
United States President
Donald Trump’s announcements about securing major concessions from
Tehran have riled supporters of the Iranian establishment, prompting rejections and clarifications from the authorities.Several current and former senior officials, state media and the Islamic Republic’s hardcore backers expressed anger, frustration, and confusion after the US leader made a series of claims, with days left on a two-week ceasefire reached on April 8.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4Iran closes
Strait of Hormuz again over US blockade of its portslist 2 of 4As oil prices plunge below $91 after weeks, a new Hormuz crisis emergeslist 3 of 4Pakistan PM, army chief wrap up key trips in push for more US-
Iran talkslist 4 of 4Displaced Lebanese return as Israeli shelling violates ceasefire in southend of listTrump on Friday said
Iran and the US would jointly dig up the enriched uranium buried under the rubble of bombed Iranian nuclear sites, and transfer it to the US. He claimed
Iran had agreed to stop enriching uranium on its soil.He also said the
Strait of Hormuz had been opened and would never be closed again, while the US naval blockade of
Iran’s ports remained in place, and sea mines were removed or were in the process of being removed.Trump also emphasised that
Iran would not receive billions of dollars of its own frozen assets abroad due to US sanctions, and that the 10-day ceasefire between
Israel and
Lebanon was completely unrelated to
Iran.Amid
Pakistan’s ongoing efforts to mediate another round of negotiations,
Iran’s Parliament Speaker
Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, who led the Iranian delegation to the Islamabad talks earlier this month, rejected all of Trump’s claims.“With these lies, they did not win the war, and they certainly will not get anywhere in negotiations either,” he posted on X early on Saturday.By Saturday noon, the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) released a statement, saying the
Strait of Hormuz is once again heavily restricted and under “strict management” of the armed forces. It cited continued “acts of piracy and maritime theft under the so-called label of a blockade” by Washington as the reason.‘Haze of confusion’In the hours it took between Trump’s flurry of announcements on Friday and official responses from Iranian authorities, supporters of the establishment voiced serious concerns about any major concessions.“Is there no Muslim out there to talk to the people a bit about what is happening?!” Ezzatollah Zarghami, a former state television chief and current member of the Supreme Cyberspace Council that controls the heavily restricted internet in
Iran, wrote on X.Alireza Zakani, the hardline mayor of
Tehran, said if any of Trump’s claims are true, then the Iranian establishment must beware “not to gift the vile enemy in negotiations what it failed to achieve in the field”.A fan account on X for Saeed Jalili, an ultrahardline member of the Supreme National Security Council who has opposed any deals with the US for decades, said “dissent” may be at play. It said Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, who has not been seen or heard from outside of several written statements attributed to him, must release a voice or video message to confirm what is happening.Jalili’s main account distanced itself from the comment, saying the fan account – which was subsequently deleted – was a sign of “infiltration” by enemies of
Iran who were trying to sow discord.Iranian state media released another written statement attributed to Khamenei on Saturday to mark Army Day, but made no mention of the political drama unfolding hours earlier, or the negotiations with the US.The dissonance was clearly on display on state television and other state-linked media on Friday, especially those affiliated with the IRGC.Multiple state television hosts and analysts harshly attacked Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi because he tweeted on Friday that the
Strait of Hormuz was “declared completely open for the remaining period of ceasefire, on the coordinated route as already announced by Ports and Maritime Organisation”.One of the hosts demanded Araghchi must immediately clarify. Another said the top diplomat’s tweet was in English, and since the Iranian people do not have access to X due to the state-imposed near-total internet shutdown for seven weeks, the message was not directed at the people.With a huge Hezbollah flag in the background, a furious presenter on state television’s Channel 3 claimed that Araghchi was somehow “the representative of the people of
Lebanon, Yemen and Iraq” because they are a part of
Iran’s “axis of resistance” of armed forces, so he should demand concessions on their behalf from Trump.Morteza Mahmoudvand, a representative for
Tehran in the Iranian parliament, went as far as saying Araghchi would have been impeached had it not been for “the excuse of war”.The Fars and Tasnim news sites, which are affiliated with the IRGC, also heavily criticised Araghchi and called for further explanations on Friday evening, with Fars arguing that “Iranian society was plunged into a haze of confusion.”Armed supporters in the streetsCritical comments from supporters of the Iranian government also flooded social media, including local messaging applications and the comments section of state-run sites.“We took to the streets every night with clear demands, but you shook hands with the killer of our supreme leader and handed our strait to the Zionists,” one user wrote on Friday in the local app Baleh, in reference to
Israel.“After all these years of sanctions and war and costs imposed on the people, if you are to give up the uranium and the strait, then why did you play with the people’s livelihoods and the blood of the martyrs for so long?” another user wrote.A large number of analysts and media personalities, including Hossein Shariatmadar, the head of the Kayhan newspaper, who was appointed by late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, also voiced criticism and demanded answers on Fars and other outlets.Regardless of whether there will be more mediated negotiations in
Pakistan or whether the war will continue,
Iran continues to encourage and arm backers to take to the streets to maintain control.State media on Friday aired footage of more armed convoys moving through the streets of
Tehran while waving the flags of
Lebanon’s Hezbollah, Iraq’s Hashd al-Shaabi and other groups. The video below shows women and children crewing heavy machineguns mounted on the back of pick-up trucks during a rally in downtown
Tehran.With no end in sight to the state-imposed internet shutdown that has wiped out millions of jobs in
Iran, in addition to steel factories and other infrastructure that were destroyed, the Iranian economy continues to suffer.The timing of the back-and-forth between Trump and the Iranian officials meant that oil prices dropped before Western markets closed on Friday, and the Iranian currency experienced more volatility.The rial was priced at about 1.46 million against the US dollar on Saturday morning, the first day of the working week in
Iran. But it shot back up to about 1.51 million after the IRGC announced the repeated closure of the
Strait of Hormuz.