U.S.
Bars Iran-Linked Ships from Transiting the Strait of Hormuz
U.S.
Central Command said that six vessels had complied with directions to turn
around and re-enter an Iranian port.
Blockade
Enforcement
·
Announcement: U.S. Central Command confirmed no
Iran-linked ships passed through the Strait of Hormuz since blockade began
(April 14).
·
Compliance: Six merchant vessels turned back and
re-entered Iranian ports after U.S. radio directives.
·
Coverage: Blockade enforced from Gulf of Oman and
Arabian Sea, east of the strait.
Strategic
Importance
·
Traffic
Pre-War: ~120
ships daily, carrying 20% of global oil & gas.
·
Iran’s
Actions: Threats
and attacks reduced commercial traffic, spiking global energy prices.
·
U.S.
Goal: Cut Iran’s
oil lifeline while ensuring safe passage for neutral vessels.
Naval
Deployment
·
U.S.
Presence: 12+
American military vessels stationed in Gulf of Oman.
·
Neutral
Shipping:
Central Command claims 20 non-Iranian vessels transited safely in first 24
hours.
·
Data
Discrepancy:
Maritime firm Kpler tracked only six ships; some may have disabled
transponders.
Specific
Incidents
·
Chinese
Tanker Rich Starry:
Under U.S. sanctions, turned back after entering strait.
·
Iran-linked
Ship Elpis:
Appeared to cross but later went offline, path unclear.
·
Expert
View:
Iran-linked vessels reluctant to venture east due to U.S. warships.
Industry
Concerns
·
Uncertainty: Shipping companies lack clear U.S.
instructions for safe passage.
·
German
Firm Hapag-Lloyd:
Six vessels stranded in Persian Gulf; relying on media for updates.
·
Questions
Raised: Safety
of mines, risk of Iranian attacks, and escort arrangements remain unresolved.
[ABS
News Service/15.04.2026]
The United States said on Tuesday that no ships had made it
through its blockade of vessels using Iran’s ports.
The announcement, from U.S. Central Command, came as ship
tracking data showed that several Iran-linked vessels had travelled through the
Strait of Hormuz after the blockade began on Monday, but that some of those
vessels had stopped after emerging east of the strait, along Iran’s southern
coast. That was a possible indication that U.S. forces were telling them not to
proceed, shipping analysts said.
It was also unclear exactly when those ships had left port
relative to the start of the blockade at roughly 10 a.m. Eastern time on
Monday.
Central Command said on Tuesday that six merchant vessels
had complied with directions by radio from U.S. forces to turn around and
re-enter Iranian ports. It did not identify the ships or the ports.
In a separate notice, Central Command said the blockade
would be enforced from the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea, both east of the
Strait of Hormuz, a crucial waterway through which over 120 ships transited
daily before the war with Iran began at the end of February. That traffic
carried a fifth of the world’s oil and gas.
A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity to
discuss operational matters, said that more than 12 American military vessels
were stationed in international waters in the Gulf of Oman.
After the war began, Iran blocked nearly all commercial
traffic through the strait by threatening and attacking vessels, causing a
drastic reduction in the amount of oil and gas getting out to world markets.
That has sharply increased the prices of gasoline, diesel and other energy
products around the world, shaking economies and governments.
To help stabilize prices, the United States had not
previously sought to block Iranian tankers, so Iranian oil continued to pass
through the strait at a volume of crude similar to prewar levels. But now, the
United States is seeking to stop that flow and remove the lifeline it provides
to the Iranian economy.
Central Command also appears to be seeking to establish
secure passage through the strait for non-Iranian ships, which have stayed away
out of fear of attacks from Iran.
The U.S. official said on Tuesday that more than 20
commercial vessels not linked to Iran had transited the strait in the first 24
hours of the blockade, including tankers, cargo carriers and container ships.
The official did not identify the vessels.
Shipping experts said they had not seen that level of
traffic. Kpler, a maritime data firm, said that it had tracked six ships
through the Strait of Hormuz on Monday. But some experts cautioned that other
ships may have turned off their transponders, devices that enable tracking.
One commercial vessel under U.S. sanctions, the Chinese
tanker Rich Starry, traveled eastward through the strait on Tuesday but then
turned around. That suggested that the ship was responding to U.S. directives,
according to Noam Raydan, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near
East Policy. “This can be linked to the blockade,” she said.
Another Iran-linked ship, the Elpis, also appeared to make
it through the strait during the blockade. But Ms. Raydan said the vessel was
offline on Tuesday, so it was not clear what its path had been.
Salvatore Mercogliano, a maritime historian and an
associate professor at Campbell University in North Carolina, said that any
Iran-linked vessels were probably reluctant to venture into the waters east of
the strait because of the U.S. warships on patrol.
“They don’t want to come out,” he said.
Though Central Command said that neutral vessels would be
allowed to traverse the strait, shipping companies said they had received no
instruction from the U.S. military on how to make the journey.
Nils Haupt, a spokesman for the German shipping company
Hapag-Lloyd, said on Tuesday that the company had not received any official
communication from U.S. officials on how to ensure safe passage for its six
vessels currently stranded in the Persian Gulf.
Instead, the company was relying on the news media for
information, he said.
“We need to know: Is it safe?” Mr. Haupt asked. “Have all
the mines been removed? Do we expect attacks from Iran? Will ships be
accompanied?”