# [WARNING] Trump Signals Iran Ceasefire End, Bombing Likely To Resume Soon

*Tuesday, April 21, 2026 at 2:30 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-21T14:30:58.960Z (16d ago)
**Tags**: US-Iran, MiddleEast, Oil, Pakistan, Ceasefire, Airstrikes, EnergyMarkets
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/4174.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Around 14:00 UTC on 21 April, President Trump said he does not expect to extend the current ceasefire with Iran and warned he expects to resume bombing, while claiming the U.S. has 'totally won the war.' Minutes earlier, reporting confirmed Vice President J.D. Vance will depart for Islamabad this evening for talks with Iranian representatives. This mix of public escalation and back-channel diplomacy sharply raises short-term risk of renewed U.S.–Iran strikes and potential disruption to Gulf energy and shipping.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

Between 13:50 and 14:01 UTC on 21 April 2026, multiple developments in the U.S.–Iran crisis were reported:
- At 13:50 UTC, Iranian officials publicly denied that any delegation had arrived in Pakistan for negotiations with the United States, calling such reports “baseless and fabricated.”
- At 14:01:53 UTC, Middle East Tracker reported that U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance will depart for Islamabad this evening for negotiations with Iran, confirming an impending senior-level U.S. presence in Pakistan.
- At 14:00–14:01 UTC, President Trump stated that he "essentially won the war" with Iran, does not expect to extend the current ceasefire, and "expects to resume bombing." This follows his earlier messages asking Iran to release eight women facing execution as a goodwill gesture ahead of talks and demanding the release of the crew of an Iranian merchant ship seized by the U.S. returning from China with “suspicious materials.”

These statements build directly on the already-noted breakdown risk in the U.S.–Iran truce and recent U.S. seizure of an Iran-linked vessel.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

On the U.S. side, the key actors are President Trump, as commander-in-chief, and Vice President J.D. Vance, who is being deployed as the lead negotiator in Islamabad. Their public and operational messaging will heavily shape military timelines. On the Iranian side, public-denial messaging suggests the political and security establishment (likely the Supreme National Security Council and IRGC leadership) is seeking to manage domestic perceptions while possibly preserving deniable channels via Pakistan.

Pakistan is emerging as a key intermediary, hosting the anticipated talks and potentially facilitating indirect U.S.–Iran engagement. Any Pakistani military or intelligence facilitation could become a factor if host-nation sensitivities or domestic backlash emerge.

3. Immediate military and security implications

Trump’s explicit expectation of resumed bombing is a concrete escalation signal, not just rhetoric. It suggests:
- U.S. forces in the region (CENTCOM assets, carrier groups, and regional airbases) will be moved to higher readiness for strike operations on short notice.
- Iran and its regional proxies (IRGC Navy, IRGC-QF, Hezbollah, Iraqi and Yemeni aligned groups) will prepare for both direct and asymmetric responses, including threats to U.S. bases and regional partners.
- The Strait of Hormuz, Gulf energy infrastructure, and U.S./allied shipping remain high-risk targets in any renewed round of escalation, even if strikes initially focus on Iranian military or nuclear-related facilities.

Iran’s denial of a delegation in Pakistan may be aimed at preserving leverage and face at home, but it also signals that Tehran does not want to appear as negotiating from weakness. That positioning increases the risk that if U.S. airstrikes resume, Tehran will feel compelled to respond visibly rather than absorb blows quietly.

For security planners, the next 24–72 hours are critical to watch for:
- Movement of U.S. air assets and naval positioning in and around the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea.
- Heightened alert states at U.S. and allied bases in the Gulf, Iraq, and Syria.
- Proxy signaling: rocket/drone fire or maritime harassment that could precede or follow a U.S. strike sequence.

4. Market and economic impact

Energy: Renewed bombing or even a credible countdown to strikes materially increases tail risk of disruption to Iranian exports and to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. This is bullish for:
- Brent and WTI crude prices, with upside skew if markets price in any probability of shipping disruptions or strikes on production/terminal assets.
- Refined products, particularly gasoline and middle distillates, via risk premia.

Safe havens and FX: Gold is likely to find support on geopolitical risk. The U.S. dollar may strengthen against EM and high-beta currencies as investors de-risk, while regional FX (GCC, TRY, INR via oil import costs, and select Asian EM) could come under pressure.

Equities and credit: Defense and aerospace stocks typically benefit on renewed conflict expectations. Conversely, global cyclicals and EM credit—especially in the Middle East and frontier issuers exposed to oil price volatility and regional instability—may widen.

Shipping and insurance: Tanker equities and marine war-risk insurance premia are likely to move higher if markets conclude that Hormuz risk has materially risen. Any follow-on U.S. seizures of Iranian-linked vessels or additional Iranian detentions of foreign ships would heighten this.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Diplomatic track: Vance’s trip to Islamabad this evening, if it proceeds as reported, will likely be framed as an attempt to secure prisoner/crew releases and test Iranian red lines. However, Trump’s public signaling suggests Washington is prepared to walk away quickly if Iran does not yield.
- Military posture: Expect OSINT indicators of U.S. force movements and heightened alerts, along with potential Iranian dispersal of assets and hardening of key sites.
- Market behavior: Oil and gold traders will react to any additional concrete signals—such as NOTAMs, maritime advisories, or U.S. statements about ‘last chance’ talks—that indicate how close the parties are to the end of the truce.

Net assessment: The probability of renewed U.S.–Iran kinetic action in the very near term has risen meaningfully, with non-trivial risk to Gulf energy flows and regional stability. Trading desks should assume elevated volatility in energy, defense, and safe-haven complexes and position risk accordingly.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Rising probability of renewed U.S. strikes on Iran and possible Iranian retaliation in/around the Strait of Hormuz is bullish for crude and refined product prices, supportive for gold and defense names, and negative for high-beta EM FX and risk assets. Watch oil futures, tanker/shipping equities, GCC and Iranian proxies’ sovereign spreads, and USD safe-haven flows.
