# [FLASH] US escalates Hormuz ‘Project Freedom’ with major military assets

*Monday, May 4, 2026 at 7:14 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-04T07:14:35.283Z (4h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, ENERGY, MIDDLE_EAST, OIL, LNG, GEOPOLITICAL_RISK, US_IRAN, RISK_PREMIUM
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/5611.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: CENTCOM will back Trump’s ‘Project Freedom’ to break the Iranian blockade in the Strait of Hormuz with missile destroyers, ~100 aircraft, and 15,000 troops, alongside a unilateral US move to begin ‘liberating’ merchant ships starting Monday. This marks a sharp escalation from prior information‑sharing/limited escort posture and materially raises near‑term risk of direct US–Iran clashes, keeping a significant risk premium in crude and product markets and adding upside volatility to gold and safe‑haven FX.

## Detail

1) What happened: In the last hour, U.S. Central Command announced it will support President Trump’s “Project Freedom” to release ships trapped by the Iranian blockade in the Strait of Hormuz with missile destroyers, around 100 aircraft, and 15,000 soldiers. In parallel, Trump has declared a unilateral move starting tomorrow morning to “liberate” merchant ships through Hormuz despite explicit Iranian warnings that any American intervention near the strait could be attacked. This is a clear operational escalation from earlier briefings that framed the US role as mainly informational support rather than active convoy or breakout operations.

2) Supply/demand impact: Roughly 17–20 mb/d of crude and condensate and ~20–25% of global LNG trade transits Hormuz. Current Iranian actions already constitute an effective blockade, with multiple tankers reportedly hit and traffic disrupted (existing alerts). The new US posture introduces two opposing forces: (i) potential partial restoration of flows if US escorts successfully move stranded vessels, vs. (ii) sharply higher probability of kinetic exchange (missile strikes on tankers, mines, anti‑ship missiles or UAVs against US assets) that could further halt or deter traffic. Net effect over the next days is **higher risk that seaborne flows remain constrained or are intermittently shut**, rather than a clean normalization.

3) Affected assets and direction: 
- Brent/WTI: Upside bias; current situation justifies and may extend a multi‑dollar risk premium (2–5%+ intraday swings possible) as traders price the tail risk of sustained disruption.
- Refined products (gasoil, gasoline, jet): Bullish, especially in Europe and Asia, given exposure to Middle East crude and product flows.
- LNG spot prices in Europe and Asia: Bullish risk premium; Qatar and other Gulf exporters depend on Hormuz.
- Gold and JPY: Flight‑to‑quality bid on escalating US–Iran war risk.
- USD/IRR and GCC FX risk/repricing via CDS: Wider Iran and regional sovereign spreads.

4) Historical precedent: Episodes such as the 2019 tanker attacks and 1980s “Tanker War” show that even limited clashes near Hormuz can add several dollars to crude within days as insurers, shipowners, and charterers pull back.

5) Duration: As long as Iran maintains a blockade posture and US forces attempt to forcibly restore passage, the risk premium is **ongoing rather than transient**. Market impact could last weeks to months, with the next 24–72 hours particularly volatile as the first escorted transits test Iranian red lines.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brent Crude, WTI Crude, Gasoil Futures, RBOB Gasoline, Arab Gulf crude differentials, LNG JKM, TTF Gas, Gold, JPY, USD/IRR, GCC sovereign CDS
