Cargo Vessel Hit by Projectile in Strait of Hormuz

The article discusses recent tensions and incidents in the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic waterway connecting the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and the Red Sea. It reports that a cargo ship was struck by a projectile, believed to be caused by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), with no injuries reported. The incident highlights ongoing regional instability, with Iran warning ships to avoid certain routes and threatening attacks on vessels that do not comply.This escalation occurred shortly after international efforts, including those by the UN’s International Maritime Association, to facilitate safe passage for ships through the strait. The attack demonstrated Iran’s capacity to disrupt shipping traffic despite international concerns and ongoing diplomatic negotiations. The Strait remains a vital route for global oil transportation, and the events underscore the fragile security situation in the region amidst broader geopolitical tensions involving the US, Israel, and Iran.




The on-again, off-again fighting around the Strait of Hormuz flared up again on Thursday when a projectile struck a cargo ship passing through the waterway.

There were no injuries in the incident, according to a terse report from the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations center, an agency of the British military that monitors security conditions at sea.

But it highlighted how tense the region remains.


The Wall Street Journal identified the targeted vessel as the Singapore-flagged Ever Lovely.

It identified its attackers as Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the backbone of the nation’s military force.

And it noted that the attack came after Iran warned ships that they are subject to attack if they attempt to use routes through the strait that Tehran has not approved.

The attack came only two days after the International Maritime Organization — a United Nations agency that monitors shipping safety — announced it was coordinating a shipping route for tankers to get safely through the strait.

Iran responded by issuing a warning that any vessels attempting to transit the strait outside of routes approved by Iran would be subject to attack.

Within hours of the strike, the IMO announced it was “suspending”  its plans to evacuate the many ships that have been unable to pass through the Strait of Hormuz because of the U.S.-Israel attacks on Iran that started Feb. 28.

The Strait of Hormuz connects the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and the Red Sea. Oil from the Gulf states passes through it on the way to the world market.

According to The Wall Street Journal, the struck vessel had been trapped in the Persian Gulf for more than 100 days.

“It sailed toward the mouth of the strait Thursday morning local time, joining three other ships that also were attempting to cross the strait round about the same time,” the newspaper reported.

“All four ships followed the route identified by the IMO, hugging the Omani coast, according to ship tracking data and crew members on a nearby ship. Ever Lovely was sailing the fastest, and therefore leading the group. There was no warning from the Iranian navy to the ships on radio or telling them to turn back, according to the seafarers in the flotilla.”

The attack underscores the fragility of any deal with Iran for the Trump administration as an Iranian military that was largely destroyed by U.S. and Israeli forces remains able to inflict precision points of pain as the Tehran regime remains defiantly in power.

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