Chart shows Iran may have put sea mines in Strait of Hormuz

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Semiofficial news agencies in Iran published a chart Thursday suggesting the country’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard put sea mines into the Strait of Hormuz during the war.

Associated Press FILE - Two police officers walk in front of an anti-U.S. billboard depicting American aircraft being caught by Iranian armed forces in a fishing net beneath the words in Farsi, Government supporters gather ahead of the funeral procession for Maj. Gen. Majid Khademi, head of intelligence for Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, in Tehran, Iran, Wednesday, April 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco) Ali, 4, holds a toy horse next to the tent his family uses as a shelter after fleeing Israeli bombardment in southern Lebanon, in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Smoke rises following several Israeli airstrikes in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar) A rescue worker extinguishes burning cars at the site of an Israeli airstrike in central Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Iran War

The reports came from the ISNA news agency, as well as Tasnim, which is believed to be close to the Guard.

The chart showed a large circle marked “danger zone” in Farsi over the Traffic Separation Scheme, which was the route ships used to take through the strait. That was where the Guard allegedly put the mines.

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It suggested that ships travel up north through waters closer to Iran’s mainland near Larak Island, a route that some ships were observed taking during the war.

The dates on the chart ran from Feb. 28 until Thursday, April 9.

It’s unclear if the Guard had cleared its alleged mining in the route. And it likely served as a pressure tactic as Iran, Israel and the United States now are in an uneasy, two-week ceasefire ahead of possible negotiations in Islamabad.

Chart shows Iran may have put sea mines in Strait of Hormuz

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Semiofficial news agencies in Iran published a chart Thursday suggesting the country’s paramilitary ...
Analysis-As Trump claims victory, Iran emerges bruised but powerful with leverage over Hormuz

By Samia Nakhoul

Reuters

DUBAI, April 8 (Reuters) - Nearly six weeks of war in Iran have ended, for now, with President Donald Trump claiming victory, but the U.S.-Iran ceasefire locks in a harsh reality: an entrenched, radical government with control over the Strait of Hormuz and a powerful lever over global energy markets and Gulf rivals, analysts say.

The shockwaves have rippled outward, contributing to global economic strains and bringing conflict to Gulf neighbours whose economies depend on stability.

"This war will be ‌remembered as Trump's grave strategic miscalculation. One whose consequences reshaped the region in unintended ways," Middle East scholar Fawaz Gerges told Reuters.

Before the war, the Strait - a narrow passage carrying around a fifth of the world’s oil and gas - was formally treated as ‌an international waterway. Iran monitored it, harassed shipping and intermittently intercepted vessels, but it stopped short of asserting outright control.

In the new reality, Tehran has moved from shadowing tankers to effectively dictating terms. It currently functions as the de facto gatekeeper of the shipping route, selectively deciding on passage and on what terms. Iran wants to charge ships for safe ​passage.

Additionally, Iran has demonstrated resilience under sustained attack and retained the capacity to escalate further, projecting influence across multiple fronts and strategic choke points. Its reach extends through Lebanon and Iraq via Hezbollah and Shi’ite militias, and into the Bab el-Mandeb in the Red Sea, leveraging the sphere of influence of its Houthi allies.

At home, Iran's leadership remains firmly in control - even though the country's economy is in tatters and great swathes of infrastructure in ruins from American and Israeli bombs.

"What did the U.S.–Israeli war actually achieve?" asked Gerges. "Regime change in Tehran? No. The surrender of the Islamic Republic? No. Containment of Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium? No. An end to Tehran’s support for its regional allies? No."

Iran has absorbed the blows while retaining - and in some cases strengthening - its core instruments of power, said four analysts and three Gulf government sources who spoke to Reuters for this story.

As well as Iran's control ‌of Hormuz, the political picture now, they noted, is of a more brutal, empowered establishment, unaccounted nuclear ⁠material, continued missile and drone production, and ongoing support for regional militias.

Echoing Trump, U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday said Washington had won a decisive military victory, and that Iran's missile programme had been functionally destroyed. The State Department and White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The United States, Israel and Iran agreed to a two-week ceasefire and U.S. and Iranian officials are expected to hold talks from Friday to discuss ⁠a long-term settlement.

While the ceasefire may halt the fighting, the Gulf officials said its durability hinges on addressing the deeper conflicts shaping the region’s security and energy landscape.

Any deal that falls short of a comprehensive settlement risks entrenching Iranian leverage rather than constraining it, they add.

Ebtesam Al‑Ketbi, president of the Emirates Policy Center described the truce as a fragile pause - one likely to institutionalize new forms of instability unless it expands well beyond a narrow cessation of hostilities.

“This ceasefire is not a solution; it is a test of intentions,” Ketbi told Reuters. "If it does not evolve into a broader agreement redefining the rules of engagement - in Hormuz and ​across ​proxy theatres - it will amount to little more than a tactical pause before a more dangerous and complex escalation."

“If Trump reaches a deal with Iran without addressing ​core issues - ballistic missiles, drones, proxies, nuclear concerns, and the rules governing Hormuz - then the conflict is effectively ‌left unresolved and the region exposed,” said Ketbi.

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HORMUZ IS RED LINE FOR GULF COUNTRIES

Iran, for its part, has put forward to Washington terms that include sanctions relief, recognition of enrichment rights, compensation for war damage and continued control over the Strait - underscoring just how far apart the sides remain.

Trump acknowledged receiving the Iranian plan and called it "a workable basis to negotiate".

For Gulf countries who rely on Hormuz to export their oil, the Strait remains a non-negotiable red line, added Saudi analyst Ali Shihabi. "Any outcome that leaves the waterway effectively in Iranian hands would be a defeat for President Trump", with the potential repercussions of high energy prices extending into the midterm elections, he said.

What the war may nonetheless open up for Tehran, Shihabi added, is the prospect of a negotiated settlement - potentially including sanctions relief.

From a Gulf perspective, the picture is deeply unsettling. Mistrust of Iran is running high following Tehran's strikes on energy facilities and commercial hubs across the region. More troubling still, the war has transformed Hormuz into an explicit instrument of leverage and coercion, analysts say.

The economic stakes are equally stark. Iran wants to charge fees for ships passing through the Hormuz ‌shipping lanes as part of any permanent peace deal, a move that would reverberate far beyond the Gulf, hitting global energy markets and the economic lifelines of ​states along the opposite shore.

“If Iran can extract millions per ship, the implications are enormous - not just for the Gulf, but for the global economy,” Ketbi said. “In that sense, ​the outcome is not just a regional setback, but a systemic shift with worldwide consequences.”

More broadly, the analysts warned, it would signal ​a fundamental change in the regional order - from a strait governed by international norms to one effectively policed by a hostile state emboldened, not weakened, by war.

GULF DEMANDS

The ceasefire, brokered by Pakistan, followed a war launched on February ‌28 by Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said they aimed to curb Iran's regional ​power, dismantle its nuclear programme and create conditions for Iranians to topple their ​rulers.

Both sides declared victory. Trump called the ceasefire a “total and complete victory,” saying U.S. forces had achieved their objectives, while Iran's Supreme National Security Council claimed Trump had accepted its conditions.

But the war has yet to deprive Iran of its stockpile of near‑weapons‑grade enriched uranium or its ability to strike neighbours with missiles and drones. The leadership, which faced a mass uprising months ago, withstood the superpower onslaught with no sign of collapse.

A Gulf source said restoring trust with Tehran would require stringent, written commitments - not informal assurances - ​covering non‑interference, freedom of navigation, and the security of key maritime corridors, including Hormuz, as well as ‌the national security requirements of the Gulf states.

Those conditions, the Gulf source said, were conveyed to Pakistani mediators to be included as part of a comprehensive settlement.

An Israeli official said senior Trump administration officials had assured Israel that they would insist ​on previous conditions, such as the removal of Iran's nuclear material, a halt to enrichment and the elimination of ballistic missiles.

Pakistan's prime minister said Iranian and U.S. delegations were expected to meet in Islamabad on Friday for what would be ​the first official peace talks since the war began.

(Writing by Samia Nakhoul; Additional reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in Washington; Editing by Frank Jack Daniel)

Analysis-As Trump claims victory, Iran emerges bruised but powerful with leverage over Hormuz

By Samia Nakhoul DUBAI, April 8 (Reuters) - Nearly six weeks of war in Iran have ended, for now, with President Donald Trump clai...
John Legend Says His Semi-Finalists on “The Voice” Were His Top 3 Singers After the Blind Auditions

John Legend revealed his semi-finalists on The Voice were his top three singers after the blind auditions

People John Legend on The VoiceCredit: Trae Patton/NBC via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Team Legend's semi-finalists are KJ Willis, Syd Millevoi and Lucas West

  • Nine contestants will compete in the semi-finals on Monday, April 13 on NBC

John Legendhas a sixth sense.

The Grammy winner, 47, revealed in a roundtable interview on Thursday, April 9, that his semi-finalists forThe Voice: Battle of Championswere his top three singers after the blind auditions.

“I just looked at my notes, and these three were my top three after the blinds, just so you know,” Legend said of KJ Willis, Syd Millevoi and Lucas West. “That's major.”

“That doesn't always stay the case. Some people, they show me something different later in the competition,” he continued. “But I could just tell from these three artists' performances in the blinds that they were all special, and it makes sense that they're in this place that they are now.”

“Each of them is such a talented artist,” Legend shared. “They're all so gifted as vocalists, as performers, and they bring something distinct to the competition. I couldn't have picked three better representatives for Team Legend going into the top nine.”

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John Legend, Kelly Clarkson, Adam LevineCredit: Trae Patton/NBC via Getty

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

The nine contestants competing for a chance to win season 29 ofThe Voiceinclude Team Legend's Willis, Millevoi and West; Team Adam's Alexia Jayy, Jared Shoemaker and Jeremy Keith; and Team Kelly's JW Griffin, Liv Ciara and Mikenley Brown.

JW Griffin, Liv Ciara, Kelly Clarkson, Mikenley BrownCredit: Trae Patton/NBC via Getty

As Team Legend prepares for the semi-finals, they all reflected on their key takeaways from this season. For Millevoi, it's remembering to be herself.

“You forget a lot of things during the course of this competition just because it's such a high-stress situation, but being yourself,” Millevoi said. “It's such an individual thing and even just us three, Lucas, KJ and I, are so different and that's what makes it so special. So, remembering your individuality at the end of the day.”

Legend added, “Being you is your superpower because no one else can be you. You are a unique brew of experiences. Your life story, your influences, that's unique. That's the advantage, and if you lean into it, that's your superpower.”

“We're not trying to stamp out the thing that makes you special,” he continued. “It's your foundation and the soul of who you are. We want to enhance it, bring it out and make the most of it.”

The semi-finals ofThe Voice: Battle of Championswill air on Monday, April 13 on NBC.

Read the original article onPeople

John Legend Says His Semi-Finalists on “The Voice” Were His Top 3 Singers After the Blind Auditions

John Legend revealed his semi-finalists on The Voice were his top three singers after the blind auditions NEED TO KNOW ...
'Jeopardy!' contestant to try for 20 consecutive wins tonight

A "Jeopardy!" contestant is having a historic run.

USA TODAY

Contestant Jamie Ding captured his 19th consecutive win on April 8, bringing his total winnings to $539,573 and cementing him on the game show's leaderboard.

Ding,a native of the Detroit area, is among thetop 10 in "Jeopardy!" history.His 19th win tied him for the eighth spot for most consecutive wins. Separately, Ding is ranked seventh in all time highest winnings from regular-season play, according to aFacebook postby the game show. Ding has a career total of 618 questions correct and 42 incorrect,according to TheJeopardyFan.com.

"Jeopardy!" competition continues on Thursday, April 9. Should Ding win, it would mark his 20th straight win and tie him for seventh place in most consecutive games won.

Is Jamie Ding still on 'Jeopardy!'?How Michigan native fared

Ding joins league of best 'Jeopardy!' contestants

Ding's current win streak may have already earned him a spot on the "Jeopardy!" leaderboard, but there's still a relatively large number between him and the all-time record.

The leaderboard for most consecutive wins includes:

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  1. Ken Jennings, 74 wins in 2004 ($2,520,700)

  2. Amy Schneider, 40 wins in 2022 ($1,382,800)

  3. Matt Amodio, 38 wins in 2021 ($1,518,601)

  4. James Holzhauer, 32 wins in 2019 ($2,462,216)

  5. Mattea Roach, 23 games in 2022 ($560,983)

  6. Cris Pannullo, 21 games in 2022 ($748,286)

  7. Julia Collins, 20 games in 2014 ($428,100)

  8. Tie between Jamie Ding in 2026, Jason Zuffranieri in 2019 ($532,496) and David Madden in 2005 ($430,400)

"Jeopardy!" contestant Jamie Ding is pictured smiling while holding his buzzer.

Ding would also have to win a little over $21,000 more in money to be ranked sixth in all time highest winnings from regular-season play. That record is also held by Jennings, who left the game with $2,520,700 in winnings from regular-season play.

The all-time winnings record, which includes "Jeopardy!" tournament play, totals at $4,938,436 and is held by contestant Brad Rutter.

Watch:'Jeopardy!' contestant 'manifested' the outcome. See how it ended.

Public officials, universities shout out 'Jeopardy!' contestant

Government officials and universities alike have noticed Ding's "Jeopardy!" performance, with some shouting out the contestant on social media to wish him luck before games. In New Jersey,where Ding lives, Gov. Mikie Sherrill took to X to grant well wishes before an early competition.

Wayne State University, where Ding's father is a professor, alsomade a supportive poston social media platform Facebook, writing "We're proud to be a part of this champion's journey!"

How to watch 'Jeopardy!'

"Jeopardy!" airs as a syndicated television show and streams on Hulu and Peacock. To find your local station and air time,visit Jeopardy.com.

Kate Perez covers national trends and breaking news for USA TODAY. You can reach her at kperez@usatodayco.com or on X @katecperez_.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:'Jeopardy!' contestant Jamie Ding set to try for 20 consecutive wins

'Jeopardy!' contestant to try for 20 consecutive wins tonight

A "Jeopardy!" contestant is having a historic run. Contestant Jamie Ding captured his 19th consecutive win on April 8, b...
Natasha Lyonne Breaks Silence After Being Escorted Off Flight In Bizarre Scene

One minute, she was making headlines at a glamorous premiere. The next,Natasha Lyonnewas being removed from aplanebefore it even left the ground.

Bored Panda

The 47-year-old actress released a statement about being kicked off aDelta Air Lines flightand missing her appearance on theDrew Barrymore Show.

Netizens tsk-tsked at her statement, saying: “So, instead of apologizing to everyone on that plane, she decides to first lament about it not being ‘in the cards’ to meet Barrymore??”

Natasha Lyonne spoke about being kicked off a Delta Air Lines flight this week

Image credits:nlyonne

Natasha Lyonne had boarded theDelta flightfrom Los Angeles to New York City on Tuesday, April 7.

But when the flight finally took off an hour behind schedule, Lyonne’s first-class seat was empty because she had been booted off the aircraft.

She addressed the strange sequence of events in a statement and gave a shout-out to unpaid TSA agents, who were unpaid due to a partial government shutdown.

Image credits:nlyonne

“My heart is with all the unpaid TSA agents at our airports,” theOrange Is the New Blackalum wrote in a Thursday tweet.

“Sure was looking forward to speaking honestly with @DrewBarrymore yesterday but guess wasn’t in the cards,” she added, having missed her planned appearance on theDrew Barrymore Showon Wednesday.

She also mentioned theNew York Postfor breaking the story about her being booted off the flight.

“Who owns page six/New York Post now again?” she asked.

The five-time Emmy nominee was escorted off a Delta Air Lines flight from LA to NYC this week

Image credits:Miguel Ángel Sanz/Unsplash

Hours before the Delta flight incident, Lyonne walked the red carpet atthe Season 3 premiereofEuphoria.

The actress, who appears as a guest star on the third season of the HBO hit, put her chest on display wearing a sheer, fully see-through top. She also wore sheer black tights under lace-up booty shorts and completed the look with a long black coat.

“So grateful to be a part of this legendary show,” she wrote on Instagram alongside NSFW photos from the event.

Following hereye-catching appearanceat the LA premiere, she boarded the Delta Flight to New York City, still wearing the same black stockings and wraparound shades.

Crew members claimed she was out of it as she sat in her first-class seat.

The actress appeared on the red carpet at the Season 3 premiere ofEuphoriahours before the flight

Image credits:Steve Granitz/Getty Images

Image credits:nlyonne

Flight attendants reportedly asked her to shut her laptop and fasten her seatbelt ahead of takeoff. But she wasn’t responsive.

Despite numerous attendants attempting to get the star to follow their instructions, she seemed to bedozing behind her sunglassesand woke up startled at some point, saying: “Ah! You scared me!”

Meanwhile, the aircraft taxied to the runway but then returned to the gate.

A crew member took Lyonne’s laptop away, and another Delta staffer boarded the plane, asking Lyonne if she needed medical attention.

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They then said, “Ma’am, I need you to come off the plane. Do you need help with your belongings?”

“Where are we?” Lyonne asked in response.

Image credits:nlyonne

The staffer told the actress they were still in LA and that the plane hadn’t “gone anywhere.”

“The plane is not going anywhere until you come off it,” the staffer told the actress.

Lyonne then coolly shushed the staffer, got up from her seat, and made her way to the bathroom.

Eating a bag of pretzels, she emerged from the bathroom and compliantly exited the aircraft. Her luggage was already waiting for her outside.

“The plane is not going anywhere until you come off it,” a Delta staffer told the actress

Image credits:nlyonne

At some point inside the cabin, passengers heard the captain’s voice, explaining why they were delayed by an hour.

“We have a passenger who, for whatever reason … wouldn’t follow some basic commands,” the pilot said.

“…We had a passenger who didn’t seem up to the task tonight, so that’s why they were asked to be booked on another flight,” they continued.

The pilot apologized for the inconvenience and said they wouldstill try to fly the passengersto New York as “quickly and as safely as possible.”

Image credits:nlyonne

Lyonne seemed unfazed as shewalked the red carpeton Thursday for the NYC premiere of Lorne, wearing an ankle-length black dress and a white button-down shirt.

The actress has struggled with dependence on alcohol and substances in the past. When she gave fans a January update about her well-being, she said she had relapsed after 10 years of sobriety.

She gave another update in March, assuring her fans and thanking them for standing by her.

“Proud to report this kid is doing a whole lot better & back on her feet,” she wrote on social media in March.

Lyonne seemed unfazed as she walked the red carpet on Thursday for the NYC premiere ofLorne

Image credits:Cindy Ord/Getty Images

“Want to thank our recovery communities & the fans who stood by & were so supportive,” she added.

The actress said she was aiming to keep the rest of her recovery journey private but looked forward to sharing her experience, strength, and hope, “as makes sense.”

She added, “My heart is with everyone ever going through it.”

Fans had mixed reactions to her response to the Delta flight incident, with some calling her “entitled” and giving “more excuses.”

“Oh no! I thought she had gotten clean years ago,” another wrote.

One fan said, “Love her. No matter what.”

“Dang. In crisis,” one commented online. “Gotta get back to the rehab”

Natasha Lyonne Breaks Silence After Being Escorted Off Flight In Bizarre Scene

One minute, she was making headlines at a glamorous premiere. The next,Natasha Lyonnewas being removed from aplanebefore it even left t...
Vietnam's top leader will make four-day visit to China, Chinese state media says

BEIJING, April 9 (Reuters) - Vietnam's top leader ‌To Lam will ‌visit China next week from ​April 14 to 17, Chinese state news agency Xinhua said ‌on Thursday.

Reuters

The ⁠announcement confirms a Reuters report about ⁠Vietnam's state president and party chief's ​planned visit ​to ​its largest ‌and most significant neighbour in terms of geopolitical and economic influence.

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In what would be ‌his first overseas ​trip since ​he ​was elected ‌state president, Lam will ​be ​meeting his counterpart, President Xi Jinping, ​according ‌to sources.

(Reporting by Liz ​Lee; Editing by ​Jamie Freed)

Vietnam's top leader will make four-day visit to China, Chinese state media says

BEIJING, April 9 (Reuters) - Vietnam's top leader ‌To Lam will ‌visit China next week from ​April 14 to 17, Chinese state news agen...

 

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