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Ludio: The Epic Fury Operation has concluded, Trump claims significant progress in US-Iran negotiations, but three red lines remain unresolved
The Iran-U.S. conflict enters a critical turning point: Secretary of State Pompeo announced on May 5 that the Epic Firestorm operation has officially concluded, and Trump claimed there has been “significant progress” in negotiations, but Iranian President Phezeshian responded with a counterattack, stating that the U.S. approach of “pressuring while demanding unilateral conditions” is fundamentally unrealistic.
(Background summary: Trump’s 14-point Iran proposal declared “unacceptable,” the Hormuz Strait oil route is in crisis, and Iraq has resumed land oil transport)
(Additional background: Breaking news — Trump: Iran almost agrees to all U.S. conditions and promises to abandon nuclear weapons! If an agreement is reached, “oil prices and inflation will plummet”)
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On the afternoon of May 5, U.S. Secretary of State Pompeo told reporters waiting outside the White House: “The Epic Firestorm operation has ended, and we have achieved the objectives of the operation.” But on the same day, Iranian President Phezeshian (Masoud Pezeshkian) and Iraq’s acting Prime Minister Zaydi spoke by phone, responding with a completely different tone: the U.S. is applying maximum pressure while demanding Iran accept unilateral conditions, a logic that is simply not realistic and cannot stand.
Two narrative lines outline the difficult impasse between both sides.
White House Statement: 38 days achieved, 66 days officially concluded
Pompeo’s words were brief, while the official White House statement detailed the results: the Epic Firestorm destroyed over 85% of Iran’s defense industrial base, with ballistic missile depots, launch vehicles, and long-range attack drones being heavily targeted; at the naval level, 16 ships totaling 150 vessels were destroyed, all submarines confirmed sunk, and 97% of naval mines eliminated during the operation.
The White House statement, titled “Peace Through Strength,” emphasized that this operation crushed Iran’s military threat and laid the groundwork for a ceasefire. However, it avoided a key issue: ending the campaign does not mean the crisis is over. The dual blockade of the Hormuz Strait remains in place, and the naval fleet has not been withdrawn from its positions.
Trump: Negotiations have “made great progress”
Meanwhile, Trump posted multiple updates on Truth Social.
He announced that the U.S. Navy escort operation “Project Freedom” through the Hormuz Strait would be paused for a while, but simultaneously emphasized that the maritime blockade of Iranian ports continues unaffected.
Trump also stated that significant progress has been made toward ending the “final Iran war agreement.” But this isn’t the first time he’s said such things, and so far, no party has provided verifiable details.
How long can the ceasefire last? Three red lines remain unresolved
The conclusion of the Epic Firestorm operation does not mean the situation has stabilized; at least three red lines remain unresolved:
First, the maritime blockade has not been lifted. As long as the U.S. continues to blockade Iranian ports, Tehran has motivation to continue obstructing commercial shipping through the Hormuz Strait as a countermeasure, meaning the economic confrontation has not truly stopped.
Second, trust gaps are hard to bridge. Contact in Islamabad in April broke down twice; Phezeshian explicitly stated during the call that “stopping provocative rhetoric and military actions” is a prerequisite for restarting effective dialogue, but this prerequisite currently does not exist.
Third, troops remain in place. Although Pompeo declared the operation over, there is no sign that the U.S. naval fleet is preparing to withdraw from the Gulf. Trump can restart Project Freedom at any time, or even escalate into a new round of military action.