Rubio Hints At ‘Plan B’ In Iran Despite New Developments

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The calm is a lie. Behind closed doors, Marco Rubio is quietly admitting what Washington won’t say out loud: the U.S., Israel, and Iran are edging along a razor’s edge, and one wrong move in the Strait of Hormuz could shatter global stability overnight. Pakistan is suddenly back in play, secret visits planned, pressure mounting, timetables shrinking. A “tolling system” threat hangs over the world’s oil lifeline, and every ship that passes through that narrow corridor now carries more than cargo—it carries the risk of a miscalculated signal, a misunderstood order.

In private briefings and cautious public remarks, Rubio has tried to balance two starkly competing realities: modest diplomatic progress and the constant risk of sudden collapse. He acknowledges that recent talks have inched forward, yet he refuses to dress them up as a breakthrough, insisting that expectations stay grounded while tensions remain dangerously high.

Behind the scenes, Pakistan’s renewed role as an intermediary underscores how fragile the moment is. Its army chief’s expected trip to Tehran signals both urgency and uncertainty, as Washington and Tehran wrestle over issues like Iran’s proposed tolling regime in the Strait of Hormuz. Rubio’s rejection of that plan reflects fears that even a small shift in control over this vital waterway could jolt energy markets and trigger broader unrest. The path of diplomacy is still open, but it is narrowing, and the decisions made in the coming weeks may define the region’s next decade.

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