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| Detailed Satellite-Style View of the Strait of Hormuz |
The Middle East remains a powder
keg in mid-2026, dominated by the aftermath of the brief but intense 2026 Iran
war. A US-brokered Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), often called the
Islamabad Memorandum, aimed to end direct hostilities, but repeated tit-for-tat
strikes, especially over control of the Strait of Hormuz have pushed the region
toward renewed escalation.
The conflict escalated in late
February 2026 when US and Israeli forces struck Iranian targets, targeting
nuclear sites, military infrastructure, and leadership. Iran responded with
missile/drone attacks on Israel, Gulf states, and shipping. Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei was killed early in the campaign, leading to massive state funerals
and calls for retribution.
In mid-June, the US and Iran
signed the 14-point MOU.
Key provisions include:
- Immediate ceasefire across fronts, including Lebanon.
- Reopening the Strait of Hormuz for safe, initially toll-free commercial shipping.
- US commitments to lift sanctions on a schedule, release frozen assets, and support a $300+ billion reconstruction plan with regional partners.
- Iran reaffirming no nuclear weapons development, with steps to address enriched uranium stockpiles under IAEA oversight.
- 60-day window (extendable) for a final comprehensive
deal.
President Trump and Iranian
officials signed it electronically, with technical talks (e.g., in Doha)
focusing on implementation. VP JD Vance has emphasized that the US seeks peace
but will respond if necessary.
The Core Flashpoint: Control
of the Strait of Hormuz
The strait, through which ~20% of global oil and significant LNG flows, became the central battleground. Iran has repeatedly asserted de facto control, attacking vessels using alternative routes (e.g., near Oman) and demanding coordination or fees.
Recent incidents (late
June–mid-July):
- Iranian strikes on commercial ships, including the Singapore-flagged Ever Lovely, Qatari LNG tanker Al Rekayyat, and others.
- US retaliatory strikes targeting Iranian coastal defenses, radars, small boats, and missile sites (over 80–300 targets in waves).
- Iranian responses hitting US-linked bases in Bahrain,
Kuwait, Jordan, and possibly Oman.
Traffic has partially recovered
but remains far below pre-war levels. Shipping insurers treat the area as a war
zone, raising costs. The US has expanded protected routes near Oman, while Iran
warns against unapproved passages.
Ship Traffic Visualization in the Strait
Trump has threatened stronger
action, including potential power infrastructure strikes, but officials signal
ongoing talks to avoid full war resumption. Iran views Hormuz leverage as
existential for deterrence.

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