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President Donald Trump has decisively rejected a proposal from Tehran to lift the ongoing U.S. naval blockade in exchange for reopening the Strait of Hormuz, maintaining maximum economic pressure as U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) readies contingency plans for powerful, fast military action against the Islamic Republic, according to a Wednesday Axios report.

The news outlet stated that the President intends to keep the naval blockade firmly in place until the Iranian regime agrees to a comprehensive deal addressing U.S. concerns regarding its illicit nuclear program. The Iranian proposal reportedly sought to separate the maritime standoff from the nuclear issue, offering to open the strategic waterway while postponing nuclear negotiations to a later date.

However, military preparations are well underway should the current deadlock persist. Sources with knowledge of the matter indicate that CENTCOM has formulated a strategy involving powerful fast military action—specifically, a short, intense wave of strikes targeting critical Iranian infrastructure. The objective of such a kinetic offensive would be to shatter the stalemate and compel Tehran to return to the negotiating table with increased flexibility.

However, as of Tuesday evening, President Trump had not yet ordered the military to execute the strikes, expressing confidence in the current strategy of naval and economic strangulation as his primary leverage.

“The blockade is somewhat more effective than the bombing,” President Trump stated in a brief telephone interview with Axios. “They are choking like a stuffed pig. And it is going to be worse for them. They can’t have a nuclear weapon.”

The President asserted that Iran’s eagerness to reach a settlement is driven entirely by a desperate need to lift the blockade. He further claimed that the nation’s oil storage facilities and pipelines “are getting close to exploding” due to their complete inability to export crude oil. While some geopolitical analysts have expressed skepticism regarding the immediacy of the pipeline threat, the crippling economic effect of the maritime embargo remains undeniable.

Signaling an uncompromising stance, the President also recently published a digitally generated image of himself bearing a firearm, accompanied by a stark warning to the Iranian regime: “NO MORE MR. NICE GUY.”

Tehran, meanwhile, has responded with characteristic belligerence. A senior Iranian security source, quoted Wednesday by the English-language state media outlet PRESS TV, warned that the U.S. naval blockade “will soon be met with practical and unprecedented action.”
The Iranian source claimed that the regime’s armed forces have thus far exercised restraint to allow time for diplomacy, but cautioned that Tehran’s “patience has limits and that a punishing response is necessary” should the United States refuse to lift the blockade.