Regional tensions have reached a boiling point following a coordinated series of attacks on commercial shipping. Three vessels were struck by “unknown projectiles” in and around the Strait of Hormuz today, leaving one ship ablaze and the world’s most critical oil chokepoint in a state of paralysis.
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- MSV Mayuree Naree (Thailand): The most critical casualty. Struck 11 nautical miles north of Oman, the bulk carrier was engulfed in a major fire. While 20 crew members were rescued by the Omani Navy, a skeleton crew remained on board to battle the flames.
- ONE Majesty (Japan): This massive container ship sustained a 10cm hull puncture 25 miles NW of Ras Al Khaimah. Fortunately, no injuries were reported, and the vessel is seeking safe anchorage.
- Star Gwyneth (Marshall Islands): Hit 50 miles NW of Dubai, the vessel reported hull damage but remains operational with all crew accounted for.
Strategic & Economic Fallout
“The targeting of innocent seafarers is an unacceptable escalation of regional hostilities.” — IMO Secretary-General
The impact of these strikes is being felt immediately across global markets:
- Chokepoint Closure: With transit rates through the Strait of Hormuz dropping to near zero, the waterway is effectively “closed” to non-Iranian commercial traffic.
- Energy Surge: Global oil benchmarks have spiked, with prices crossing the $107 per barrel mark as supply chain fears intensify.
- Conflict Escalation: These strikes bring the total number of vessels targeted since February 28 to 14, signaling a direct threat to international maritime law.
Safety Advisory
The UKMTO has issued an emergency warning for all regional traffic. Ships are advised to maintain strict radio silence, increase visual lookouts, and report any “unmanned aerial or surface craft” immediately.















