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US, Gulf Arab Nations Draft New UN Resolution on Strait of Hormuz

May 4 (Reuters) – The ⁠United ⁠States and Gulf ⁠Arab nations are drafting a U.N. Security ​Council resolution designed to condemn Iran for blocking the ‌Strait of Hormuz in ‌response to a U.S.-Israeli bombing campaign, U.S. ⁠Ambassador to ⁠the U.N. Mike Waltz said on Monday.

Waltz said negotiations ​will take place this week on the resolution, which comes after permanent Security Council members Russia and China ​blocked a resolution last month that Washington hoped would ⁠galvanize international ⁠efforts to restore ⁠freedom ​of navigation of the waterway.

• The U.S. is co-drafting ​the new ⁠resolution with Bahrain with input from Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, Waltz told reporters on a briefing call.

• The resolution is ⁠expected to require Iran to cease attacks on merchant shipping ⁠and attempts to impose tolls on shipping in the strait, and it will demand Iran stop placing sea mines and disclose the locations of mines.

• Waltz says draft resolution is a “narrower effort” than the previous failed resolution and comes while a ceasefire is in place with Iran. “This ⁠is much more focused on mining international waterways and on tolling, which all of the economies of the world are affected by, particularly those ​in Asia,” he said.

(Reporting by Simon Lewis; ​Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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