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Military planners to discuss Hormuz reopening in London

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More than a dozen countries said last week they ​were willing to join an international mission led ​by Britain and France, to protect shipping in ⁠the Strait of Hormuz when conditions permit

LONDON (Reuters) – Military planners from more than 30 countries will hold two-day talks in London from Wednesday ​to advance a mission to reopen the ‌Strait of Hormuz and draw up detailed plans, the British government said.

More than a dozen countries said last week they ​were willing to join an international mission led ​by Britain and France, to protect shipping in ⁠the Strait of Hormuz when conditions permit.

The commitment ​came after some 50 countries from Europe, Asia and ​the Middle East joined a video conference aimed at sending a signal to Washington after US President Donald Trump said he ​did not need allies' help.

Britain's Ministry of Defence ​said in a statement the meeting on Wednesday would build on ‌progress ⁠made at last week's talks.

"The task, today and tomorrow, is to translate the diplomatic consensus into a joint plan to safeguard freedom of navigation in the ​Strait and ​support a ⁠lasting ceasefire," said UK defence minister John Healey.

"I am confident that, over the ​next two days, real progress can be ​made."

Britain ⁠said the talks would advance military plans to reopen the Strait of Hormuz once conditions allow, following a ⁠sustainable ​ceasefire. Participants are expected to discuss ​military capabilities, command and control arrangements, and how forces could deploy ​to the region.

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