Yvette Cooper continues Saudi visit as Iran threatens to block key oil route
The Foreign Secretary will continue her visit to Saudi Arabia on Friday amid continued concern about Iranian threats to the Strait of Hormuz.
She arrived in the country on Thursday in a show of solidarity with Gulf states hit by Iranās retaliation to ongoing joint US-Israeli strikes.
Since then, Iranās new supreme leader has threatened to continue attacks on the countryās neighbours until they āexpel the Americansā as he vowed to avenge āmartyrsā killed in the conflict.
In a written statement read out on Iranian television by a news anchor, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei also threatened to continue blocking the Strait of Hormuz, a vital shipping lane for oil from the Gulf.
The effective blockade of the strait has seen oil prices spike, touching 100 dollars per barrel again on Thursday and threatening higher inflation in the UK and across the world.
Against that background, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said he would work to āde-escalate the situationā and was co-ordinating with other world leaders on the supply of oil.
Part of that effort saw Ms Cooper meet a range of Saudi ministers on Thursday, including the energy minister and foreign minister.
And she addressed a special meeting of the Gulf Co-operation Councilās (GCC) foreign ministers on regional stability and Mr Khameneiās threats to the Strait of Hormuz.
GCC secretary-general Jasem Al-Budaiwi thanked Ms Cooper for the UKās military and āmoral supportā.
The UK continues to carry out defensive operations in the region, including RAF jets flying sorties over Jordan, Qatar and the UAE to protect against drone attacks.
British troops came under attack at a military base in Erbil, Iraq, on Wednesday night, defence chiefs have said.
Defence Secretary John Healey was briefed on the latest updates on British action in the conflict in the Middle East during a visit to the Northwood military headquarters in Hertfordshire on Thursday.
Asked on Thursday whether the UK would be prepared to participate in a patrol of the straits, the minister said it was āearly daysā and insisted there was an āinternational imperativeā to resolve the situation.
Demining any waters would be āextremely difficult,ā he said, adding that he was having discussions with planners and that there were already some demining autonomous systems in place in the region since before the conflict.
āIn the end, this is likely to be most quickly sorted and the straits are most likely to be quickly opened by a de-escalation of the conflict, by a greater stabilisation and confidence in the region and by all those nations that want to see the straits reopened being willing to work together.ā
The Defence Secretary warned that Vladimir Putinās āhidden handā was behind some of the Iranian tactics and that the Russian president was benefitting from the surge in oil prices triggered by the conflict.
āIt helps him with a fresh supply of funds for his brutal war in Ukraine,ā he said.
On Friday, French President Emmanuel Macron confirmed a French soldier had been killed in an attack targeting Erbil and several others had been injured.
In a post on X, Mr Macron said: āTo his family, to his brothers in arms, I want to express all the affection and solidarity of the Nation.ā
Elsewhere, in a bid to ease global pressures, US treasury secretary Scott Bessent announced the country would provide a temporary authorisation for countries to buy Russian oil stranded at sea.
āThis narrowly tailored, short-term measure applies only to oil already in transit and will not provide significant financial benefit to the Russian government,ā he said in a post on X.
The temporary authorisation will last until April 11