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UN Security Council Proposes Sanctions Over Strait of Hormuz Crisis

The United States and its Gulf allies have submitted a draft resolution to the United Nations Security Council, threatening Iran with severe economic sanctions if it does not halt its ongoing maritime attacks in the Strait of Hormuz. The draft demands that Tehran immediately disclose the positions of all naval mines, stop levying illegal transit tolls on commercial vessels, and allow the establishment of a U.S.-led humanitarian corridor for key shipments.


This initiative represents the latest multilateral diplomatic push to secure the vital waterway, which previously handled twenty percent of the world's crude oil before the conflict broke out. A previous, more aggressive resolution was vetoed by Russia and China shortly before the April ceasefire was announced. To secure international consensus, the new proposal was drafted under Chapter 7 of the U.N. Charter, shifting the focus from direct military intervention to the strict enforcement of economic sanctions.


U.S. Ambassador Mike Waltz expressed confidence that the revised, narrower language would successfully pass the fifteen-member council without triggering a veto from Iran's strategic allies. Concurrently, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio accused Tehran of holding the global economy hostage through maritime blockades. Serious diplomatic negotiations continue in New York to persuade China to abstain from blocking the measure.

 
 
 

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