The United States has deployed more than 10,000 sailors, Marines, and Air Force personnel to enforce a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, backed by at least 12 warships and dozens of aircraft. US Central Command (CENTCOM) declared that “no ships made it past” in the first 24 hours and that six merchant vessels were turned around. President Trump threatened to “eliminate” any Iranian ship that approached the blockade zone.
That is the official version. The tracking data tells a more complicated story.
What CENTCOM Says vs. What the Data Shows
CNN reported that ships did, in fact, pass through the strait during the blockade’s first day. Among them was the Elpis, a Comoros-flagged oil tanker that is itself subject to US sanctions. The vessel departed an Iranian port and transited the strait, according to CNN’s reporting and corroborated by MarineTraffic, a widely used vessel tracking platform.
US officials separately acknowledged that more than 20 commercial ships passed through the Strait of Hormuz within the first 24 hours of the blockade. The explanation offered was that non-Iran-bound vessels were allowed to transit freely – the blockade targets Iranian maritime commerce, not all shipping through the waterway.
This distinction matters enormously. The Strait of Hormuz carries roughly one-fifth of the world’s daily oil supply. A total blockade of the strait would trigger a global energy crisis within days. What the US appears to be conducting is a selective interdiction operation targeting Iranian-linked vessels while allowing the broader flow of commerce to continue.
The Gap Between Rhetoric and Operations
The challenge is that the rhetoric has outpaced the operational reality. When CENTCOM declares that “no ships made it past” and tracking data shows a sanctioned Iranian-linked tanker transiting the same waterway, the credibility gap is immediate and measurable. Both statements may technically be true if they refer to different categories of vessels, but the impression left with the public is one of total blockade – an impression the data does not support.
CENTCOM has stated that the blockade applies to all countries equally. If that is the case, how did a US-sanctioned tanker departing an Iranian port make it through? Was the Elpis interdicted and released? Was it missed? Was its transit deemed permissible under rules of engagement that have not been made public? These are not rhetorical questions – they are operational details with significant strategic implications.
Context: Collapsed Peace Talks
The blockade was imposed following the collapse of peace talks in Islamabad. The diplomatic track, whatever its prospects, is now effectively dead. In its place stands a naval cordon involving 10,000 personnel and a presidential threat to destroy Iranian vessels – a posture that leaves very little room for de-escalation.
The Strait of Hormuz is 21 nautical miles wide at its narrowest point. Iran’s coastline runs along its northern shore. Iranian naval and Revolutionary Guard assets operate in and around the strait daily. The proximity alone makes escalation a matter of when, not if, unless one side blinks or a back channel produces results that the formal talks could not.
What We Know and What We Do Not
Here is what can be verified: the US has deployed a massive naval and air presence to the strait. CENTCOM claims effective interdiction. Vessel tracking data and CNN reporting indicate that ships, including at least one sanctioned tanker, continued to transit. More than 20 commercial vessels passed through in 24 hours. The blockade targets Iranian commerce specifically, not all maritime traffic.
Here is what cannot be verified: whether the blockade is achieving its stated objectives, what the actual rules of engagement are, and whether the selective enforcement approach can be sustained without incident in one of the most congested and strategically sensitive waterways on Earth.
The public deserves clarity on these questions. A naval blockade is an act of extraordinary consequence – historically, it has been treated as an act of war under international law. The American people, and the global community dependent on Hormuz shipping lanes, are entitled to know whether this operation matches its own press releases.





