Let $P$ be a compact, convex subset of $\mathbb{R}^n$ (infinite-dimensional generalisations welcome, but not necessary). Let's say that disjoint subsets $W_1$, $W_2$ $\subset P$ are opposed if there exist parallel hyperplanes $H_1$, $H_2$ supporting $P$, such that $W_i \subset H_i \cap P$.
Let $F_1$ and $F_2$ be faces of $P$, such that their extreme points are pairwise opposed: i.e. $v_1, v_2 \in P$ are opposed whenever $v_i$ is an extreme point of $F_i$. Are $F_1$ and $F_2$ opposed?
I have a tentative proof when $P$ has affine dimension equal to 2, which I am struggling to generalise even to 3 dimensions. The converse is trivial. I'd also be interested to know if a proof of this requires some restriction on $P$ (e.g. letting $P$ be a polytope).

