Oman foreign minister blames Israel for ongoing conflict

Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Albusaidi speaks during a joint press conference with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi (not pictured), in Tehran, Iran, December 30, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 19 March 2026
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Oman foreign minister blames Israel for ongoing conflict

  • Albusaidi blamed “Israel’s leadership” for persuading Trump that “an unconditional surrender would swiftly follow the initial assault and the assassination of the supreme leader,” Ali Khamenei, who was killed in the opening salvo of the war

PARIS: A negotiated deal between the US and Iran to avert war “appeared really possible,” Oman’s Foreign Minister, who mediated talks between the two sides, said in an article published on Thursday, while blaming Israel for the ongoing conflict.
Writing in The Economist, Badr Albusaidi abandoned the usual reserve of diplomatic language, calling the war a “catastrophe” and saying US President Donald Trump’s administration had “lost control of its own foreign policy.”
Albusaidi claimed the US and Iran had been “on the verge of a real deal” on Iran’s nuclear program twice over the last nine months, including in June last year when the process ended with Israeli-US attacks on Iran.
He mediated a second round of indirect negotiations that resumed in Oman on Feb. 6, with the final round held in Geneva on Feb. 26.
“It was a shock but not a surprise when on Feb. 28 — just a few hours after the latest and most substantive talks — Israel and America again launched an unlawful military strike against the peace that had briefly appeared really possible,” Albusaidi wrote.
The details of what was on the table in Geneva are of major significance, experts say, because Trump justified the war by saying Iran posed an “imminent” threat with its nuclear program.
Albusaidi blamed “Israel’s leadership” for persuading Trump that “an unconditional surrender would swiftly follow the initial assault and the assassination of the supreme leader,” Ali Khamenei, who was killed in the opening salvo of the war.
“The American administration’s greatest miscalculation, of course, was allowing itself to be drawn into this war in the first place.”
“America’s friends have a responsibility to tell the truth,” he continued, adding that one of the messages “involves indicating the extent to which America has lost control of its own foreign policy.”
The Guardian newspaper revealed this week that Britain’s national security adviser, Jonathan Powell, attended the final round of US-Iran talks in Geneva and viewed Iran’s proposals as “significant enough to prevent a rush to war.”
“The UK team was surprised by what the Iranians put on the table,” an anonymous former official who was briefed on the talks told the newspaper.
The US negotiating team comprised Trump’s special envoy, real estate developer Steve Witkoff, and his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who did not bring a technical team to advise on complex nuclear issues, reports say.