US President Donald Trump on Wednesday warned Iran to comply with US demands, as Vice President JD Vance and the US Department of Energy highlighted steady oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz.
"I don't like giving deadlines, but they pretty much know - they know the story. They better behave," Trump said ahead of the Defense and Innovation Summit in Pennsylvania.
At a separate event earlier on Wednesday, Vance said the administration's objectives are to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon while maintaining the free flow of oil and gas. "Iran doesn't have a nuclear weapon; we have the free flow of oil and gas," Vance said.
He noted that the administration will use military force only when it supports those objectives. "What the President has done very, very capably is said we're going to use military force in this situation when it's connected to something we're trying to achieve," Vance added.
"We're not just going to do something open-ended, indefinitely... We're going to try to use our military force as one of the many tools that we have to solve the problem," Vance said, ruling out an indefinite military campaign.
Separately, the US Department of Energy said in an X post on Tuesday that 8.5 million barrels of oil transited the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, in line with the recent average, bringing total Arabian Gulf flows to about 15 million b/d.
The department credited President Trump and the US military for maintaining shipments through the waterway, saying, "The US military will ensure oil flows continue, with or without the Iranians, to keep markets well supplied."