Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr bin Hamad Al Busaidi has issued a severe condemnation of the recent joint military operations conducted by the United States and Israel against Iranian targets. In a striking rebuke, the senior diplomat suggested that Washington had been strategically misled by its Israeli allies into initiating conflict at the very moment a comprehensive peace agreement appeared imminent.
Minister Al Busaidi, who played a pivotal mediation role in negotiations between Iran and the Trump administration, expressed his profound disappointment through social media platform X (formerly Twitter). His public statement came mere hours after expressing measured optimism during a televised interview with CBS News, where he confidently announced that a peaceful resolution was nearly finalized.
The Omani foreign policy chief articulated his dismay that “active and serious negotiations have yet again been undermined” by military action. He further emphasized that such offensive operations neither serve American national interests nor advance the cause of global stability. In an emotional appeal, Al Busaidi urged the United States to avoid deeper military entanglement in the region, stating unequivocally: “This is not your war.”
During his earlier Face the Nation appearance, the minister had detailed substantial progress in negotiations regarding Iran’s nuclear program. He highlighted a groundbreaking commitment from Tehran to completely forego stockpiling nuclear materials suitable for weaponization—a significant advancement beyond the parameters of the 2015 Obama-era nuclear agreement.
Al Busaidi explained that this “zero stockpiling” agreement, coupled with comprehensive International Atomic Energy Agency verification protocols, would effectively neutralize Iran’s capacity to develop nuclear weapons regardless of enrichment activities. The diplomatic framework reportedly included provisions to convert existing stockpiles into irreversible fuel forms.
The military strikes triggered immediate retaliatory measures from Iran, with explosions reported across multiple Gulf states including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar. Tragically, a strike on an educational facility in southern Iran resulted in numerous casualties, with preliminary reports indicating at least 50 schoolgirls aged 7-12 were killed.
