EXPLAINERMarco Rubio has called on the United Nations for a Hormuz solution as talks for a peace deal in
Iran continue.Published On 7 May 2026US Secretary of State
Marco Rubio has urged the United Nations to pressure
Iran “to stop blowing up ships, remove the mines and allow humanitarian relief” in the
Strait of Hormuz, he told reporters on Tuesday.
UN Security Council members began closed talks on Tuesday on a resolution the
United States has drafted with
Bahrain,
Saudi Arabia, the
United Arab Emirates,
Kuwait and
Qatar, which, if passed, could lead to sanctions against
Iran, and potentially authorise force if Tehran fails to halt attacks and threats to commercial shipping in the strait.The closure of the strait, through which one-fifth of the world’s oil and natural gas supplies are shipped during peacetime, has caused the price of oil to rocket and prompted fears of a global economic crisis.However, the Trump administration has taken a hostile approach to the
UN since Donald Trump’s inauguration as president in January 2025, and has appeared to prefer to forge its own path on the international stage.So why has the US turned to the
UN for support now, and what is the significance of the latest developments?On Tuesday, Rubio said the US-proposed
UN resolution demanding that
Iran cease attacks in the
Strait of Hormuz would be a test of the “utility” of the United Nations, and urged
China and Russia not to repeat vetoes.“If the international community can’t rally behind this and solve something so straightforward, then I don’t know what the utility of the
UN system is,” Rubio said.Since Donald Trump began his second term as US president last year, Washington has undermined the
UN and the existing international rules-based order.In September 2025, during his speech at the
UN General Assembly, Trump questioned: “What’s the purpose of the United Nations?”He added: “The
UN has such tremendous potential. I’ve always said it. It has such tremendous, tremendous potential. But it’s not even coming close to living up to that potential.”In the same speech, Trump claimed his administration had ended “seven unendable wars” without any assistance from the body, adding, “It’s too bad that I had to do these things instead of the United Nations doing them.”In January this year, Trump assembled a “Board of Peace” as a part of a US-brokered plan to end Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza.When a reporter asked Trump if he wanted the Board of Peace to replace the
UN, Trump said that it “might”.What
UN Security Council resolution has the US proposed?The US and its Gulf allies have proposed a
UN Security Council resolution threatening
Iran with sanctions and other measures if it does not halt attacks on ships in the
Strait of Hormuz, stop imposing “illegal tolls”, and disclose the placement of all mines to allow freedom of navigation.The draft resolution, seen by some international media, also demands that
Iran “immediately participate in and enable”
UN efforts to establish a humanitarian corridor in the strait for the delivery of vital aid, fertiliser and other goods.It is the latest effort by the US and its Gulf allies to reopen the strait after an initial resolution aimed at opening the strait was vetoed by
China and Russia, hours before Washington and Tehran announced their temporary ceasefire in early April.While Rubio said he looks forward to the vote on the resolution in the coming days, he also told journalists on Tuesday that he remained uncertain if “slight adjustments” the US had made to the text would be enough to avoid a veto from Tehran’s allies on the council.A previous Bahraini resolution, which was backed by the US and appeared to open a path to legitimise military action against
Iran, failed last month when Russia and
China exercised their vetoes in the 15-member Security Council.The new draft avoids explicit language about authorising force while still operating under Chapter VII of the
UN Charter, which allows the Security Council to impose measures ranging from sanctions to military action.“Everyone wouldn’t want to see this vetoed again, and we’ve made some slight adjustments to the language,” Rubio told reporters at a White House news briefing, while adding: “I don’t know if it will avoid a veto or not.”“I think it’s a real test to the
UN … as something that functions,” he added.The draft also calls on Tehran to cooperate with
UN efforts to establish a humanitarian corridor through the strait, citing the disruption of aid deliveries, fertiliser shipments and other essential goods.The
UN secretary-general would report back within 30 days on compliance and the Security Council would reconvene to consider additional steps, including possible sanctions, if
Iran is found to have failed to implement the resolution.Washington reportedly hopes to conclude discussions between Security Council members quickly, with the aim of circulating a final draft of the resolution by Friday and holding a vote early next week, although Russia and
China still have a competing text under consideration.Asked if the resolution could avoid another Chinese veto,
China’s
UN mission said: “The draft was circulated yesterday in the afternoon. We are still doing our assessment.”Russia’s
UN mission did not immediately respond.