politics
Trump heads to China as Iran war cost nears $29
US President Donald Trump is due to arrive in Beijing as he seeks to boost trade ties with China, despite growing geopolitical tensions over Taiwan and Iran. Meanwhile, China’s top diplomat has urged Pakistan to step up mediation efforts between Iran and the United States, including facilitating discussions on the possible reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. Crude oil prices slipped on Wednesday, snapping a three-day rally as markets reacted to developments around a fragile US-Israel ceasefire in the Iran conflict. Follow our live coverage for the latest updates:
06:30 AM, 13 May 2026
Oil prices slide: Brent and WTI slip after 3-day gains
Oil prices pulled back in Asian trade Wednesday, reversing a three-session climb as markets took stock of shifting demand cues and persistent worries about global economic growth.
As of 11 am Tokyo time, both major benchmarks were softer, with traders digesting mixed signals from economic data and ongoing geopolitical developments.
The retreat follows a run of gains earlier this week that had been supported by supply concerns and optimism about sustained fuel demand.
06:06 AM, 13 May 2026
Trump heads to China for superpower summit
Donald Trump was due in Beijing Wednesday on the first visit to China by a US president in nearly a decade, as he seeks to ramp up trade despite potential friction over Taiwan and Iran.
Leaving Washington on Tuesday on a trip that was delayed by his war, Trump said he expected a “long talk” with counterpart Xi Jinping about Iran, which relies on China as the top customer for its US-sanctioned oil.
But he also played down disagreements on Iran, saying that Xi has been “relatively good, to be honest with you”.
“I don’t think we need any help with Iran. We’ll win it one way or the other. We’ll win it peacefully or otherwise,” Trump told reporters as he left the White House.
05:30 AM, 13 May 2026
China urges Pakistan step up mediation in Middle East
China’s top diplomat urged Pakistan to step up mediation efforts between Iran and the United States, and to help “properly” address the reopening of the Hormuz strait, Chinese state media said on Wednesday.
Foreign Minister Wang Yi spoke to his Pakistani counterpart Ishaq Dar in a call on Tuesday, state news agency Xinhua reported.
US President Donald Trump is expected to arrive in Beijing on Wednesday evening for talks with leader Xi Jinping, whose country is a key strategic and economic partner of Iran.
Wang called on Pakistan to “step up mediation efforts, and contribute to properly addressing issues related to opening the Strait of Hormuz”, state news agency Xinhua said.
“China will continue to support Pakistan’s mediation efforts and make its own contribution toward this end,” Wang said, according to Xinhua.
Pakistan has emerged as the key mediator between the United States and Iran, who are in the process of negotiating a peace agreement after the conflict.
The Iranian government rejected on Tuesday the idea of amending its proposals, which Trump has deemed “garbage”.
04:55 AM, 13 May 2026
Shipping through Hormuz ramps up under ‘dark’ or ‘Emcon’ conditions: tracker
Commercial shipping through Hormuz increasingly appears to be operating under dark or “Emcon” conditions, according vessel tracker Windward. “IRGC fast craft activity expanded across both Hormuz corridors, including swarm-style formations and escort-like behavior near commercial traffic,” the marine tracking site reported. Windward identified nine commercial tanker transits through Hormuz on May 11, including “dark fleet-linked” LPG and product tankers. Qatar LNG cargoes also resumed transiting Hormuz for the first time since the February closure. “Emcon” in shipping stands for “emissions control”, during which vessels minimise radio, radar, and electronic emissions to avoid detection by military radars or intelligence gathering systems in the region. It is a high-stakes “hide-and-seek” game, with ships trying to move through a critical, high-risk corridor without being detected.
03:02 AM, 13 May 2026
US blockade allows Iran ‘no money’: Trump
US President Donald Trump told US media before he boarded the Air Force at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, en route to China: “We don’t have to rush anything. We have a blockade which allows them no money. It’s a very simple thing: we cannot let them have a nuclear weapon — because they’d use it.”
02:59 AM, 13 May 2026
Hegseth defends US-Iran war successes amid sense Senate clash
At a US Senate hearing on the Pentagon’s proposed $1.5 trillion budget, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth pointed to what he called “battlefield gains” and said the US Navy blockade had severely strained Iran’s economy. He pushed back on appeals to reopen the Strait of Hormuz despite mounting pressure from lawmakers over rising US fuel prices.
The conflict began on February 28 with Operation Epic Fury, a wave of US airstrikes targeting Iranian nuclear facilities. Tehran responded with retaliatory attacks, before a Pakistan-brokered ceasefire took shape around April 8. That truce is now on “life support”, as per Trump.
Pentagon officials told senators the fighting has cost nearly $29 billion so far and claimed the lives of 13 US service members. Democrats pressed for a clearer “and exit strategy, while many Republicans defended the sustained pressure campaign as necessary to halt Iran’s nuclear ambitions.
01:20 AM, 13 May 2026
Lebanon says 13 killed in Israeli strikes in the south
Israeli strikes killed 13 people in southern Lebanon on Tuesday, including a soldier, a child and two rescue workers, the health ministry said.
“A strike on the city of Nabatieh left five dead, including two Civil Defence rescuers,” the ministry said, while another strike in around Jebchit left four dead “including a soldier and a Syrian national” and a third strike in Bint Jbeil killed “four civilians, including a child and a woman”.
GN
world
Saudi Arabia launches Red Sea shipping route
The Saudi Ports Authority (Mawani) has launched a new cargo shipping service linking Jeddah Islamic Port with Salalah in Oman and the Port of Djibouti, as the Kingdom accelerates efforts to strengthen maritime connectivity and position itself as a regional logistics hub.
According to Saudi state television, the service has a carrying capacity of up to 1,730 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) and is aimed at supporting the kingdom’s import and export activity while expanding links with regional and international ports.
The move forms part of Saudi Arabia’s broader logistics strategy under Vision 2030, which seeks to diversify economy and strengthen the kingdom’s role in global trade routes connecting Asia, Africa and Europe. Mawani recently launched the “Red Sea Express” cargo shipping service through King Fahd Industrial Port in Yanbu, linking Saudi Arabia with Ain Sokhna in Egypt and Aqaba in Jordan to improve regional trade and supply-chain efficiency.
The Kingdom has invested heavily in ports, shipping infrastructure and logistics corridors in recent years as GCC countries compete to become major transport and trade hubs.
GN
politics
Pakistan hopes to host US-Iran peace talks ‘very soon
Pakistani prime minister Shehbaz Sharif has congratulated Donald Trump on his peace efforts and said Pakistan hopes to host another round of talks between the US and Iran “very soon”.
Sharif also said in a post on X that the US president held a “very useful and productive” phone call earlier in the day with the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey, Egypt, the UAE, Jordan and Pakistan, with Pakistani army chief Syed Asim Munir also on the line.
Sharif said:
The discussions provided a useful opportunity to exchange views on the current regional situation and how to move the ongoing peace efforts forward to bring lasting peace in the region. Pakistan will continue its peace efforts with utmost sincerity and we hope to host the next round of talks very soon.”
US vice-president JD Vance led a US delegation to Islamabad in the first round of peace talks with Iran six weeks ago, which ended without an agreement.
Iran executed one person for charges related to sending information to the US and Israel during the war, the Iranian judiciary’s Mizan news agency reported on Sunday, according to Reuters.
The individual was sending data about Iran’s defence industry to “the enemy”, the news agency alleged.
The draft agreement between the US and Iran also makes clear the Israel- Hezbollah war in Lebanon would end, Axios is reporting.
The newsite quotes an unnamed Israeli official as saying Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed concern about that condition – and other aspects of the deal – during a call with Donald Trump on Saturday.
The report went on:
The US official said it would not be a ‘one-sided ceasefire’ and if Hezbollah tried to rearm or instigate attacks, Israel would be allowed to take action to prevent it. ‘If Hezbollah behaves, Israel will behave.’”
As just mentioned, the report says the agreement is only in unfinalised draft form and “could still fall apart”, according to a US official.
Peace draft involves reopening Hormuz strait during 60-day truce extension – report
The agreement the US and Iran are reportedly close to signing involves a 60-day ceasefire extension during which the strait of Hormuz would be reopened, according to Axios.
During that time Iran would be able to freely sell oil and negotiations would be held on curbing Iran’s nuclear program, the US news site is reporting, citing an American official, while also saying the details were in an agreement “draft” as it currently stood.
“Those details have not been confirmed by the Iranian side, though Tehran has also indicated a deal is getting close,” the report says.
Some of the draft details look to align with what is being reported from sources quoted by the Associated Press and the New York Times, as our full report details.
The deal would avoid an escalation of the war and decrease the pressure on the global oil supply, Axios says, adding:
However, it’s unclear whether it will lead to a lasting peace agreement that also addresses President Trump’s nuclear demands.”
The report says that during the 60-day Hormuz strait reopening, Iran would agree to clear mines it deployed in the waterway and allow ships to pass freely. In exchange, the US would lift its blockade on Iranian ports.
The report also says:
Both Trump and the mediators have indicated the deal could be announced on Sunday, though it has not been finalized and could still fall apart.”
Pakistan says ‘encouraging’ progress towards peace deal
The Pakistani army has said the negotiations with Iran resulted in “encouraging” progress towards a final understanding.
The deal being negotiated was “fairly comprehensive to terminate the war”, two Pakistani sources involved in the negotiations to end the war told Reuters.
Iran had said on Saturday that it was working towards a memorandum of understanding with the US laying out an approach to ending the war after its top officials met with Pakistani army chief Asim Munir.
Reuters quoted sources as saying the proposed framework would unfold in three stages: formally ending the war, resolving the crisis in the strait of Hormuz and launching a 30-day window for negotiations on a broader agreement, which can be extended.
One of the Pakistani sources also there was no guarantee the US would accept the memorandum. If it did, it would lead to further talks after the Eid holiday ended on Friday.
On Saturday Donald Trump told Axios he expected to decide on Sunday whether to resume attacks on Iran. “Either we reach a good deal or I’ll blow them to a thousand hells,” the news site quoted him as saying.
The Guardian
politics
FAO warns of agri-food shock from Strait of Hormuz closure
The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) of the United Nations warned that a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz risks triggering a structural agrifood shock, which could culminate in a severe global food price crisis within six to 12 months.
The situation could be further exacerbated by the onset of the El Niño weather phenomenon, which is expected to cause droughts and disrupt rainfall and temperature patterns across multiple regions.
Because farmers are forced to plant with fewer inputs, crop yields are expected to drop over the next six to 12 months, resulting in global food shortages and severe inflation, as per ReliefWeb.
The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway connecting the Arabian Gulf to the open ocean, acts as a global artery for both energy and agriculture. It facilitates the trade of up to of internationally traded fertilizers and a significant portion of the sulfur required to manufacture them, as per FAO
The Chain Reaction
Energy epikes: A prolonged closure drives up oil and gas prices. Energy is required to physically move and operate the global food system.
Input shortages: Ships carrying vital materials (like nitrogen and phosphate) remain idle. Farmers facing shortages or prohibitively high costs for these nutrients cannot maintain optimal soil fertility.
Reduced yields: With fewer agricultural inputs available, crop yields per acre drop. This particularly threatens staples like wheat, rice, and maize.
The 6-to-12-month lag
Because the world has some existing food reserves, a “buffer” period prevents immediate panic.
However, during this 6-to-12-month timeframe, planting seasons will inevitably pass without the necessary inputs, FAO warns.
When these lower-yield harvests materialize down the line, global food supplies tighten, culminating in skyrocketing retail food prices and widespread inflation.
Humanitarian flows
To mitigate this outcome, the FAO recommended establishing alternative trade routes, managing export restrictions, safeguarding humanitarian aid flows, and building strategic reserves to absorb rising transport costs.
The organisation stressed that the window for proactive intervention is narrowing rapidly, noting that current decisions by farmers and governments regarding fertiliser application, imports, and financing will dictate whether a major crisis materialises.
According to the FAO, the shock is projected to ripple through consecutive phases, impacting energy, fertilisers, seeds, crop yields, and commodity prices before culminating in food inflation.
GN
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