# [WARNING] U.S. Claims Hormuz ‘Absolute Control’ as Navy Reopens Shipping Lane

*Monday, May 4, 2026 at 2:01 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-04T14:01:44.403Z (3h ago)
**Tags**: StraitOfHormuz, USNavy, Iran, Energy, Oil, MiddleEast, Shipping, ProjectFreedom
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/5664.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 13:19 and 13:30 UTC, U.S. officials publicly asserted that American forces now have “absolute control” of the Strait of Hormuz and have begun reopening it to commercial traffic. CENTCOM reported U.S. guided‑missile destroyers crossing the Strait and two U.S.-flagged merchant ships safely transiting, directly challenging Iran’s ongoing IRGC-driven disruption. This is a major escalation in the Iran–U.S. standoff with immediate implications for oil, shipping, and regional security.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

At 13:19 UTC on 4 May 2026, U.S. Central Command reported that U.S. Navy guided‑missile destroyers had transited the Strait of Hormuz into the Arabian Gulf “in support of Project Freedom,” and were actively assisting efforts to restore commercial shipping. CENTCOM specified that two U.S.-flagged merchant vessels have already successfully passed through the Strait and are proceeding on their journeys.

Around 13:25–13:26 UTC, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Fox News that the United States had “absolute control” of the Strait of Hormuz and was “opening up the waterway.” He added that President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping had discussed Iran in their recent phone calls. These comments directly overlay previously reported IRGC attacks on a South Korea-linked vessel near UAE waters and an Iranian attempt to impose a de facto blockade.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

The operational arm is U.S. CENTCOM naval forces, likely including Arleigh Burke–class destroyers with Aegis air and missile defense, operating under the authority of the White House and DoD. The political statement comes from Treasury, signaling that Washington sees this not only as a military issue but as a financial and energy-security priority. Iran’s counterpart remains the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Navy and Aerospace Force, which has already demonstrated capability to strike or harass shipping and trigger air-raid alerts in UAE cities such as Dubai.

3. Immediate military and security implications

The U.S. has moved from contesting Iran’s interference to declaring de facto control over the chokepoint. This raises several short-term risks:
- **Escalation ladder:** Iran may test the U.S. claim with further harassment, drone or missile launches, or attempts to stop non-U.S.-flagged vessels, risking direct U.S.–Iran clashes at sea.
- **Rules of engagement:** Prior alerts indicated U.S. ROE were loosened; the combination of that with “absolute control” rhetoric increases the chance of rapid, lethal responses to perceived Iranian threats.
- **Regional pressure:** Gulf monarchies (UAE, Saudi, Qatar) will be pressed to coordinate more closely with U.S. naval posture while managing domestic vulnerability to missile and drone retaliation.

4. Market and economic impact

The Strait of Hormuz is the transit route for roughly 20% of global crude and a major share of LNG flows. The U.S. assertion of control and the initial successful transit of two U.S.-flagged ships are **marginally bearish for crude in the near term** compared with a full blockade scenario, as they suggest some restoration of flow capacity.

However, the situation remains highly unstable:
- **Oil:** Traders will price in a persistent geopolitical risk premium; any Iranian kinetic response against U.S. or allied vessels could trigger immediate intraday spikes in Brent and WTI, potentially >5% moves.
- **LNG and shipping:** Tanker and LNG freight rates remain elevated, but confidence may stabilize if more successful escorted transits are reported. Insurers will reassess war risk premia based on the frequency and safety of these passages.
- **Safe havens and FX:** Continued confrontation risk supports gold and the U.S. dollar as safe havens, while pressuring currencies of Gulf producers and risk-sensitive emerging markets.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Additional CENTCOM releases are likely, detailing more escorted convoys and the scale of U.S. naval presence in the Strait and Arabian Gulf.
- Iran/IRGC messaging can be expected, either denying U.S. control, threatening retaliation, or signaling new “red lines.” Watch for missile or drone activity around UAE and Gulf shipping lanes.
- OPEC+ members will quietly reassess production and export logistics; sudden export disruptions from a major Gulf state would be a trigger for further alerts.
- Markets will focus on real shipping data (AIS tracks, port loadings) to validate whether the announced reopening translates into sustained, secure transit for non-U.S.-flagged vessels.

Overall, this development represents a decisive U.S. bid to break Iran’s attempted stranglehold on Hormuz, lowering the probability of a prolonged full-scale blockade but increasing the risk of sharp, localized military clashes with outsized energy-market impact.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
If sustained, partial reopening of Hormuz could ease upside pressure on crude and freight rates, but U.S.–Iran confrontation risk and Iranian asymmetric response potential will keep a volatility premium in oil, gold, and regional risk assets; naval engagement risk could still trigger sharp intraday oil spikes and safe-haven flows.
