‘A Complete Fabrication’: US Denies Iran’s Strait of Hormuz Breakthrough Report

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The White House dismissed Iranian media claims of a US-Iran maritime deal as “fabricated,” denying any MOU on lifting blockades or troop withdrawal, amid escalating information warfare over Gulf tensions
‘A Complete Fabrication’: US Denies Iran’s Strait of Hormuz Breakthrough Report
US President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington DC, April 21. Credits: Getty Images

The White House has delivered a sharp, high-stakes rebuttal to Tehran, completely dismantling claims broadcast by state-backed networks regarding an imminent diplomatic breakthrough over crucial maritime trade corridors.

The US administration issued a definitive denial of assertions that Washington and Tehran were on the verge of finalising a preliminary blueprint aimed at restoring maritime commerce through one of the world's most critical energy transit choke points.

Calling the report a "complete fabrication", the White House denied claims aired by Iranian state television that the United States had proposed a draft Memorandum of Understanding involving the lifting of the naval blockade on Iran and the withdrawal of American forces from the Gulf region.

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This aggressive pushback underscores the intense information warfare currently playing out alongside kinetic tensions in the region.

In a severe public correction aimed not just at foreign state broadcasters but also at domestic newsrooms that carried the unverified narrative, Washington chose to issue a direct public takedown on social media.

"This report from Iranian-controlled media is not true and the MOU they 'released' is a complete fabrication. Nobody should believe what the Iranian state media is putting out. FACTS MATTER," the White House said on X as it lashed out at US media for reporting the Iranian claims.

What Did Iranian Media Claim About the US-Iran Maritime Deal and Strait of Hormuz Shipping Revival?

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The fierce American denial comes directly in response to reports circulating earlier in the day, which suggested that the United States and Iran were making progress towards a preliminary peace understanding.

These initial details, propagated heavily by Iranian state media, pointed to a draft Memorandum of Understanding intended to halt hostilities and revive commercial shipping channels through the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz.

Providing a breakdown of this potential breakthrough, accounts broadcast by Iranian state television and the Mizan news agency on Wednesday indicated that the outlined framework proposes a sequential withdrawal of US military forces from areas surrounding Iran.

This would reportedly occur alongside the cessation of a maritime blockade enforced by Washington around the critical waterway.

In exchange for these significant Western concessions, the state-backed reports claimed that Tehran would pledge to normalise commercial vessel transit through the channel.

The ultimate objective under this clause, according to the Iranian narrative, is to return traffic to pre-conflict volumes within a tight one-month timeframe.

(With inputs from ANI)