# [WARNING] US ‘Project Freedom’ Revived As Gulf Allies Restore Base Access

*Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 6:12 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-07T18:12:08.617Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: StraitOfHormuz, UnitedStates, SaudiArabia, Kuwait, UAE, Egypt, Iran, Oil
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/6082.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 17:36–17:56 UTC, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait restored U.S. military access to their bases and airspace, clearing the way for Washington to restart the ‘Project Freedom’ mission to escort shipping from the Persian Gulf. In parallel, Egyptian Rafale jets have been publicly confirmed and inspected in the UAE, signaling a widening regional security coalition around the Strait of Hormuz. These moves reshape the military balance around a critical oil chokepoint and will immediately influence energy markets and Iran’s escalation calculus.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

From 17:36 to 17:56 UTC on 7 May 2026, multiple reports (14, 33, 10, 13) indicate a coordinated shift in Gulf security posture:

- At 17:36 UTC, a Wall Street Journal–sourced report (14) stated that Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have restored U.S. military access to their bases and airspace after briefly restricting support for Washington’s Strait of Hormuz mission. This explicitly “clears the way” for the U.S. to restart the ‘Project Freedom’ escort operation.
- At 17:55 UTC, a Spanish-language recap (33) confirmed the same development, attributing the decision to a new call between former U.S. President Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and framing it as lifting a blockade on U.S. use of bases/airspace.
- At 17:55 UTC, another source (10) notes that the U.S. is looking to restart ‘Project Freedom’ and that the mission to escort ships out of the Persian Gulf could start as early as this week, explicitly citing Saudi and Kuwaiti removal of airspace and basing restrictions.
- At 17:53 UTC, a separate report (13) states that Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi and UAE President Mohamed bin Zayed jointly inspected Egyptian Air Force fighter jets, likely Rafales, stationed in the UAE. The UAE Defense Ministry publicly confirmed the deployment, indicating Egyptian aircraft are in-theater to support UAE defense.

These developments occur in the context of an ongoing Iran-related crisis in and around the Strait of Hormuz and recent disruption of shipping and energy infrastructure already noted in prior alerts.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

Key actors:
- United States: The decision to restart ‘Project Freedom’ implies tasking from the U.S. National Command Authority (President/Secretary of Defense) to CENTCOM to assemble an air-naval escort posture. Operational control likely sits with U.S. Fifth Fleet (Bahrain) and associated air assets in the Gulf.
- Saudi Arabia and Kuwait: By restoring base and airspace access, Riyadh and Kuwait City are re-aligning with Washington after a brief restriction period. The decision is attributed at the political level to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and senior Kuwaiti leadership.
- United Arab Emirates and Egypt: The public joint inspection of Egyptian Rafale jets in the UAE by Presidents el-Sisi and Mohammed bin Zayed signals high-level political endorsement of Egyptian forward deployment in support of Gulf defense, integrating Egypt into the anti-Iran deterrent posture.
- Iran: While not directly quoted in these specific reports, Iran is the implicit adversary targeted by ‘Project Freedom’ and the broader coalition posture, given its role in recent Hormuz tensions.

3. Immediate military and security implications

The restoration of U.S. basing/airspace access and likely restart of ‘Project Freedom’ in the coming days has several operational effects:
- Rapid increase in U.S. air and naval presence: Expect additional U.S. naval escorts and air cover for commercial shipping entering and exiting the Persian Gulf, with ISR (intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance) surge over Hormuz and adjacent sea lanes.
- Coalition broadening: Egyptian Rafales in the UAE expand the range of coalition strike and air defense options in the event of Iranian missile or drone attacks on shipping or Gulf infrastructure. This adds an Arab conventional air power component to what had been largely a U.S.-Gulf defense architecture.
- Deterrence vs. escalation: The visible coalition build-up is intended to deter Iranian attacks or interdictions on shipping. However, it also increases the density of potentially adversarial forces in a narrow chokepoint, raising the risk of miscalculation (e.g., clashes between Iranian fast boats/drones and coalition escorts).
- Operational tempo: With escort operations potentially restarting “as early as this week,” the next 24–72 hours will likely see rehearsal transits, NOTAMs (airspace notices), and pre-positioning of air assets and logistics in Saudi, Kuwaiti, and Emirati bases.

4. Market and economic impact

Energy and shipping:
- Crude oil: The prospect of organized U.S.-led convoys and enhanced air cover marginally reduces tail-risk of an uncontrolled, prolonged shutdown of Hormuz, which handles a large share of global seaborne oil. This can cap some of the recent panic-driven upside in crude futures, though prices are likely to stay elevated given that the underlying Iran crisis is unresolved.
- Tanker markets and insurance: War-risk insurance premia could stabilize or edge lower if underwriters believe escorts materially reduce the probability of successful attacks. However, the highly militarized environment maintains a significant risk premium.
- LNG and refined products: Improved security for eastbound and westbound cargoes from Qatar and other Gulf exporters is supportive of supply continuity, easing immediate fears in European and Asian gas markets.

Financial assets:
- GCC equities and currencies: Clarity that the U.S. and regional partners are coordinating may support sentiment in Saudi, Kuwaiti, UAE, and Qatari equity markets and keep FX pegs perceived as stable. Defense, logistics, and energy infrastructure names may outperform.
- U.S. and global markets: U.S. defense sector equities (shipbuilders, missile defense, ISR, drone and fighter jet OEMs) stand to benefit from sustained operations and replenishment demand. Global risk assets may see reduced downside pressure relative to a scenario where Hormuz escorts were constrained, but geopolitical risk remains a volatility driver.
- Safe havens: Gold and the U.S. dollar will likely remain bid until it is clear Iran accepts the new security reality or negotiates de-escalation, as any Iranian retaliation (e.g., missile salvos, cyber attacks, asymmetric strikes) would quickly reprice risk.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Operational announcements: Expect formal U.S. or coalition statements outlining convoy procedures, rules of engagement, and participating navies/air forces. NOTAMs and maritime advisories will signal exact start times and corridors.
- Iranian messaging and potential probes: Tehran is likely to denounce the move as aggression and may conduct demonstrative actions—missile tests, naval drills, drone overflights, or cyber probing of energy and port infrastructure—to test coalition resolve.
- Further regional alignments: Other Gulf states (e.g., Bahrain, Qatar, Oman) may clarify their roles, while Egypt could expand its deployed contingent or coordinate more closely with UAE-based air defenses.
- Market reaction: Oil and shipping-related markets will respond in real time to any evidence of successful convoy operations, Iranian harassment attempts, or new attacks on tankers or infrastructure. Any incident involving casualties or damage to a major tanker would quickly push this situation into a higher alert tier.

Overall, the restoration of U.S. basing and the visible Egyptian-UAE deployment mark a decisive shift from partial Gulf distancing to an overt, multi-state security coalition around the world’s most critical oil chokepoint, with immediate implications for both regional deterrence dynamics and global energy pricing.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Restored U.S. basing and airspace access in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait and a likely imminent restart of naval/air convoy operations in/near the Strait of Hormuz should reduce immediate fears of uncontrolled shipping disruption, modestly easing extreme upside risk in crude and tanker insurance premia. However, visible Egyptian Rafale deployment to the UAE and the formalization of a broader anti-Iran maritime architecture may increase medium-term geopolitical risk pricing in oil, GCC assets, and defense equities, while supporting U.S. dollar and safe-haven demand if Iran responds asymmetrically.
