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Commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz remains under severe strain after reports that Iranian forces fired on merchant vessels and warned ships they were not authorized to transit the waterway. The incidents mark a renewed maritime escalation in the broader U.S.–Iran conflict and place fresh pressure on one of the world’s most important energy corridors.

Merchant vessels report direct fire

Reuters reported on April 18 that merchant ships attempting to cross the strait received radio warnings from the Iranian navy stating they were not permitted to pass. Two vessels also reported being hit by gunfire, according to the agency.

The reported attacks represent a shift from harassment, delays, or coercive inspections to direct engagement with civilian shipping. If sustained, that would significantly increase operational risk for commercial operators, insurers, and naval forces monitoring traffic through the area.

Conflicting claims over whether Hormuz is open

Associated Press reported that Iran has again fully closed the Strait of Hormuz in response to the continuing U.S. blockade. AP also said the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned approaching vessels that they could be treated as enemy targets.

The same report said Iranian forces fired on several commercial ships, including two India-flagged vessels. Those accounts help explain recent mixed messaging around the waterway: while some diplomatic statements have suggested partial reopening, reported conditions at sea indicate that access remains subject to Iranian control and could change quickly.

Traffic moving only under tight restrictions

Reuters reported that British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper called for the full resumption of shipping through Hormuz, saying normal maritime traffic has not returned. A convoy of tankers has reportedly moved through the area, but only under tightly managed conditions.

That distinction is important for shipping markets. The strait may be passable in limited cases, but it is not operating as a normal commercial route. Vessel movement appears restricted, politically conditioned, and vulnerable to rapid disruption, leaving charterers and insurers to treat the corridor as an active security risk rather than a stabilized lane.

Maritime pressure now central to the conflict

Recent developments suggest the conflict is increasingly being fought through blockade pressure, shipping disruption, and control of sea access rather than only through strikes on military or infrastructure targets. AP reported that the U.S. blockade remains in place, while Washington continues to use maritime pressure as part of its broader strategy.

That means any formal ceasefire has done little to restore confidence at sea. Instead, the maritime domain has become a primary arena where both military leverage and economic pressure are being applied.

International response may widen

More than 50 countries support freedom of navigation through the strait, and more than a dozen are prepared to provide maritime assistance if required. That does not guarantee a coalition deployment, but it raises the possibility of expanded escort missions or convoy protection if attacks on commercial shipping continue.

For now, the Strait of Hormuz remains the conflict’s most sensitive pressure point. It is where military confrontation, energy security, and global trade intersect most directly, and where further incidents could quickly broaden the crisis beyond the immediate U.S.–Iran dispute.


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