# [FLASH] Trump Claims Iran in ‘State of Collapse’, Hormuz Request Raised

*Tuesday, April 28, 2026 at 2:28 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-28T14:28:01.609Z (8d ago)
**Tags**: Iran, StraitOfHormuz, Oil, MiddleEast, UnitedStates, Geopolitics, EnergyMarkets
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/4944.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

---

**Summary**: Around 13:32–13:55 UTC on 28 April, Donald Trump posted on Truth Social that Iran has informed the US it is in a 'state of collapse' and has asked Washington to 'open the Hormuz Strait' as it manages an internal leadership crisis. Almost simultaneously, at 13:53 UTC an Iranian army spokesperson said the country remains in a state of war with an updated target bank. If substantiated, this suggests acute instability inside Iran with direct implications for control of the Strait of Hormuz and global oil flows.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

Between 13:32 and 13:55 UTC on 28 April 2026, several channels (Reports 1, 7, 8, 10, 22) relayed the same statement from Donald Trump on Truth Social: that Iran has "informed" the US it is in a "State of Collapse" and has requested that the US "Open the Hormuz Strait" as it attempts to resolve a 'leadership situation.' The wording implies either direct or indirect communication from Iranian authorities to US counterparts.

At 13:53 UTC (Report 5), Iranian state media quoted an Iranian army spokesperson stating that the war is not over, the situation is still considered war, and that their 'bank of objectives and equipment' has been updated. This indicates continued combat posture and active targeting despite any internal turmoil.

These claims arise in the context of an ongoing Iran‑related conflict (implied by 'war' status) and prior tensions around the Strait of Hormuz. There is not yet independent confirmation from official US government channels, nor detail on the exact nature of any request to 'open' the strait (e.g., easing US‑imposed interdictions, de‑escalation of naval rules of engagement, or facilitating shipping).

2. Who is involved and chain of command

Key actors:
- Iranian leadership: Described by Trump as facing a 'leadership situation' and 'state of collapse.' This may reflect internal regime crisis, contested succession, or breakdown of command and control.
- Iranian armed forces: Through the army spokesperson on state media, they assert continued wartime status and active operational planning, suggesting the military remains organized and is signaling deterrence and continuity.
- United States: Trump’s message suggests some form of channel with Iranian representatives, but it is unclear whether this communication involved current US officials or is being framed politically. Actual authority over US naval posture and sanctions rests with the sitting US administration and the Pentagon.

3. Immediate military/security implications

A genuine 'state of collapse' in Iran would be a major strategic shock across the region. Key implications:
- Strait of Hormuz control: The strait is Iran’s primary lever against global oil flows. A request for the US to 'open' it could signal that Iranian forces are unwilling or unable to guarantee shipping, or that factions want external de‑escalation to avoid further pressure during an internal power struggle.
- Command and control risks: Internal disarray raises the risk of miscalculation by IRGC naval units, missile forces, or allied militias acting autonomously. The army’s insistence that 'war is not over' suggests at least part of the security apparatus is reinforcing a hard‑line stance.
- Regional actors: Gulf states, Israel, and European navies are likely to raise alert levels and closely track any changes in Iranian naval behavior, missile deployments, and proxy activity.
- Terror and proliferation risks: Leadership instability could unlock rogue actions by hardline elements, including missile/drone strikes in the Gulf, cyber operations, or pressure through regional proxies.

4. Market and economic impact

The Strait of Hormuz handles roughly a fifth of global oil flows. Any perception that control is uncertain or about to change will:
- Crude oil: Spur immediate risk‑on buying in Brent and WTI via geopolitical risk premia. Traders will price in both a potential near‑term disruption and the possibility of medium‑term normalization if a more pragmatic leadership emerges.
- Tanker flows and freight: Insurance premia for transiting Hormuz are likely to widen; tanker equities and Gulf shipping rates could spike. Note parallel OSINT today (Report 6) about over 60 empty supertankers heading to the US Gulf Coast amid a demand surge for US oil, which may amplify reshoring dynamics.
- Safe havens: Expect short‑term bids into USD, CHF, JPY, and gold, especially if US naval deployments adjust or if there are signs of internal conflict in Iran.
- Regional assets: Gulf equity markets and local FX could see volatility; Iran‑exposed EM debt and frontier markets will face higher risk premia.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

Key watch points:
- Confirmation: We should expect statements from the current US administration, Pentagon, and CENTCOM either confirming or downplaying any Iranian communication about 'collapse' or requests regarding Hormuz. Their tone will be critical for markets.
- Iranian internal signals: Changes in public appearances by top Iranian leaders, unusual security deployments in Tehran, disruptions to state media, or conflicting orders from different power centers will be early indicators of actual collapse vs psychological messaging.
- Maritime picture: Navies and ship‑tracking services will monitor for new notices to mariners (NOTAMs/NAVTEX), changes in Iranian patrol patterns, or any closure/opening signals in the strait. Any incident involving commercial vessels would quickly escalate this to a clear Tier‑1 shipping chokepoint event.
- Proxy posture: Activity changes among allied militias in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Lebanon, and the Gulf will reveal whether the regime is able to coordinate its external network under stress.

Overall, even if Trump’s claim overstates the degree of 'collapse,' the combination of his statement and Iranian army war‑status messaging signals a moment of exceptional uncertainty in Iran’s leadership and security posture, with direct implications for global energy security and risk assets.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Very high short‑term volatility risk in crude benchmarks (Brent/WTI), Middle East equities, safe‑haven FX (USD, CHF) and gold. If control of Hormuz is changing or US naval posture shifts, oil could see a sharp spike followed by potential retracement if flows normalize. Heightened geopolitical risk premia across global markets.
