Donald Trump told Axios on 29 April that "the blockade is somewhat more effective than the bombing. They are choking like a stuffed pig" 1. Within hours he posted on Truth Social that Iran must "cry uncle", with an AI-rendered image of himself carrying an assault rifle. The same day, Secretary of State Marco Rubio appeared on Fox News and rejected the two-phase ceasefire text Iran had conveyed via Pakistan on 28 April . Rubio called the proposal "better than expected" but insufficient, with the new US condition: "definitively prevent them from sprinting towards a nuclear weapon at any point" 2.
Trump's ranking inverts the operational picture US officials have painted since 28 February. Through March and April the campaign was framed as a bombing operation with a maritime tail; CENTCOM's vessel-redirection count , was logged as enforcement of the blockade rather than the centrepiece. The Axios line moves the blockade ahead of the bombing in the President's own framing, putting the Strait of Hormuz, the IRGC fast-attack craft tracked by Sentinel-2 , and the LPG SEVAN seizure at the operational core. It also matches the line Russia used to declare the campaign unlawful at the Kremlin meeting with Araghchi on 25 April .
Rubio's wording shifts the bargaining ground harder than Trump's. Iran's earlier negotiating position offered a verifiable freeze on enrichment with a return to JCPOA-style monitoring. Washington had previously demanded only no nuclear weapon. Rubio's version, "definitively prevent... at any point", removes the temporal qualifier that made any enrichment programme negotiable. A definitive bar at any point reads as a permanent prohibition on the latent capacity Iran has accumulated; IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi confirmed on 23 April that Iran holds 440.9 kg of 60% uranium that cannot currently be verified . Rubio's condition asks Iran to surrender that stockpile and the underlying knowledge.
Trump's earlier Truth Social post on 25 April had told Tehran to "call us" ; Pakistan's revised text was the call. The rejection arrived not in a signed executive instrument or a State Department communique but in a cable interview and a Fox News appearance. Trump and Rubio are running the institutional response through television while the document trail stays empty.
