Allies Spurn Trump’s Hormuz Warship Request as Republicans Defend His Shifting Iran Strategy
President Trump has publicly pressed China, France, Japan, South Korea, the U.K. and other oil‑dependent countries to send warships to reopen the Strait of Hormuz—threatening further strikes on Iran’s coastline and promoting a U.S.‑led "Hormuz Coalition" or even seizure of Kharg Island—yet by mid‑March no nation had formally committed, with many European, Asian and regional partners publicly noncommittal or opposed and China urging de‑escalation. Republican lawmakers have defended the administration’s approach despite Trump’s shifting public stance about needing allies, while Iran’s IRGC says it controls the strait and ongoing missile and drone attacks have choked most tanker traffic, driven up oil and gasoline prices, and increased civilian and U.S. casualties.
📌 Key Facts
- President Trump publicly urged China, France, Japan, South Korea, the U.K. and other oil‑importing nations to send warships to reopen and secure the Strait of Hormuz — via Truth Social, a Financial Times interview and remarks aboard Air Force One — and warned of consequences (including delaying his China trip and criticizing NATO) if allies did not help.
- Allied responses were largely noncommittal or negative: many European countries, Japan, Australia and others declined or said they would not send warships (the U.K. ruled out carrier deployments but offered limited support such as minesweeping drones and base access); China issued only calls for de‑escalation and did not agree to join escorts.
- The White House has sought to organize a multinational "Hormuz Coalition" to escort tankers and has discussed contingency options — including a possible seizure of Iran’s Kharg Island — but coalition planning was described as messy, countries feared mine and escalation risks, and no formal multinational escort force had been confirmed.
- U.S. forces carried out strikes on Iranian military targets: CENTCOM reported strikes on more than 90 targets on Kharg Island and use of deep‑penetrator (GBU‑72) bombs against hardened coastal anti‑ship missile sites; officials said oil export infrastructure was left largely intact so far, though U.S. leaders warned that could change.
- Iran and its proxies have asserted control over the Strait of Hormuz, warned that transits by "enemies" will be targeted, and launched missile and drone attacks across Gulf states and toward Israel; Tehran says the closure is selective (allowing some tankers, including shipments to China) and the IRGC has threatened further retaliation, including personalized threats against Israeli leaders.
- The conflict has sharply disrupted shipping and energy markets: transit through Hormuz collapsed (data show far fewer passages versus prewar daily averages), insurers have begun refusing coverage for the route, the IEA moved to release emergency stocks (≈412 million barrels total), and oil traded near $100–$105/barrel while U.S. pump prices rose noticeably month‑over‑month.
- The humanitarian and military toll is significant and rising: reporting across outlets cites roughly 1,300+ killed in Iran, hundreds killed and hundreds of thousands displaced in Lebanon, civilian deaths in Gulf states and Israel, and at least 13 U.S. service members killed with more than 200 injured; diplomatic compounds and regional infrastructure have also been struck or threatened.
- Politically, the episode has produced friction: Trump used allied reluctance to attack NATO partners publicly and tie cooperation to diplomatic priorities; Republican lawmakers defended the administration’s shifting public posture by insisting a coherent strategy exists, while EU and other leaders pushed for diplomatic solutions rather than putting personnel at risk in an active conflict.
📊 Relevant Data
In February 2026, the unemployment rate for Black workers in the US was 7.5%, up 1.4% from the previous year, while the overall unemployment rate rose to 4.4% in March 2026 amid rising oil prices due to the Iran war.
Why are unemployment rates climbing for Black workers? — Marketplace
Families living in majority-Black census tracts in the US spend 5.1% of their income on energy costs, compared to 3.2% in other tracts, heightening vulnerability during oil disruptions like those from the Strait of Hormuz closure.
Black families are the hardest hit by high energy costs — UPI
As of 2024, there were approximately 750,000 Iranian Americans in the US, comprising 0.2% of the total population.
7 facts about Iranians in the U.S. — Pew Research Center
Major waves of Iranian emigration since the 1979 Islamic Revolution have been driven by rising inflation, corruption, income inequality, and rapid urbanization.
1979: Iran and America — Brookings Institution
📊 Analysis & Commentary (4)
"The Fox News opinion argues that U.S. military gains in the Iran war give President Trump a diplomatic 'card' to play with Xi — urging him to confront Russia and China for aiding Iran and to exploit China’s energy vulnerabilities to pressure cooperation over reopening the Strait of Hormuz."
"The piece critiques Trump’s Sunday‑night public threats over the Strait of Hormuz — branding a 'Hormuz Coalition,' warning NATO and China they’ll be 'remembered' if they don’t help — arguing the tactic is transactional, risks alienating allies bound by legal and political limits, and substitutes theater for the coalition‑building real diplomacy requires."
"A POLITICO Playbook column argues that MAGA supporters are increasingly alarmed the Iran war’s disruption of the Strait of Hormuz may force the U.S. into deeper, politically dangerous escalation—even if battlefield strikes are presented as a success—echoing and commenting on reporting about Trump’s difficulties assembling allied naval support to reopen Hormuz."
"An explicitly pro‑administration opinion piece arguing the U.S. should seize a narrow window—militarily and diplomatically, including pressuring allies and leveraging China—to secure and reopen the Strait of Hormuz now, offering a set of bold policy moves to exploit Iran’s degraded naval posture and end the energy shock."
📰 Source Timeline (28)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- Republican lawmakers such as Sen. Jim Justice, Rep. John Rutherford, Rep. Nick LaLota and Sen. John Kennedy are on record insisting the administration anticipated Iran’s move in Hormuz and has a strategy, despite Trump’s shifting public stance.
- Trump’s own statements on allied warship contributions have swung within days from calling on China, France, Japan, South Korea, the U.K. and others to send ships to later saying, “We don’t need too much help, and we don’t need any help.”
- Rep. Rutherford argued that building a coalition in advance would have sacrificed “surprise first‑strike capability,” even though the U.S. had already deployed the largest force of American warships and aircraft in the region in decades before the attack, per AP.
- Sen. John Kennedy attacked U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer for declining to send ships, calling him “a major‑league wiener” and dismissing allied leaders’ concerns while saying the U.S. will find a way to secure the strait in a “reasonable amount of time.”
- The piece notes Iran has effectively cut off all traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20% of global oil and LNG flow annually, and that U.S. gasoline prices have climbed nearly $1 per gallon in a month according to AAA.
- Trump wrote on Truth Social that 'most of our NATO Allies' have told the U.S. they do not want to get involved in its military operation related to Hormuz and warned that a negative response would be 'very bad for the future of NATO.'
- Sen. Lindsey Graham publicly said the lack of allied support for a potential Hormuz mission 'makes me second guess the value of these alliances' and warned of 'wide and deep' repercussions.
- The United Kingdom has ruled out sending warships into the Strait of Hormuz or nearby Iranian waters, offering instead only limited support such as minesweeping drones and permission for 'specific and limited' U.S. use of Diego Garcia and RAF Fairford.
- France has declined to participate in Iran combat operations, with President Emmanuel Macron saying any French escort mission would occur only once the situation stabilizes.
- The article reports that insurance companies have begun refusing to insure ships traversing the Strait of Hormuz and that only a 'very limited' number of ships have passed since Operation Epic Fury began.
- Chinese Foreign Ministry offered a noncommittal public response, repeating calls for all parties to stop military operations and avoid further escalation, but did not agree to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
- Analyst Ali Wyne of the International Crisis Group says Trump underestimated the fallout from Operation Epic Fury and that his request to delay the Xi summit underscores that Washington now needs help from its main strategic competitor to manage a crisis of its own making.
- The article specifies that Trump’s state visit to China had been scheduled for March 31 but was never officially confirmed by Beijing, which now says both sides remain in communication and clarifies the postponement is not tied to the Hormuz request.
- Chinese diplomats have been stepping up regional engagement and on Sunday delivered a $200,000 emergency humanitarian aid package to Iran via the Red Cross and Red Crescent for families of children and teachers killed in the bombing of the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school in Minab, with China’s ambassador condemning the school attack.
- Analyst Sun Yun argues that China’s incentive to satisfy Trump’s Hormuz request has diminished, while Asia Group consultant Brett Fetterly says the political environment makes it difficult for Trump to travel abroad while managing military operations, making the delay mutually convenient.
- CENTCOM says U.S. forces used multiple 5,000‑pound GBU‑72 deep‑penetrator 'bunker buster' bombs against hardened Iranian anti‑ship missile sites along Iran’s coastline near the Strait of Hormuz on Tuesday.
- CENTCOM characterizes the targeted Iranian anti‑ship cruise missiles as posing a risk to international shipping in the strait.
- The article reiterates that most shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has been halted since early March after the war began, and notes about 20 vessels have been attacked in the area.
- Lloyd’s List Intelligence data via AP: 89 ships, including 16 oil tankers, crossed Hormuz between March 1 and 15, down from roughly 100–135 passages per day before the war, with more than one‑fifth of those 89 vessels believed to be Iran‑affiliated.
- Trump, in fresh Oval Office remarks Tuesday, calls NATO’s refusal to commit escorts a 'very foolish mistake,' says 'we don’t need them, but they should have been there,' and uses the situation as a 'great test' of whether allies will show up.
- Multiple Trump advisers tell Axios they believe Trump will want to end major Iran operations before Netanyahu does, despite their current close alignment.
- White House officials say U.S. war aims are primarily to decimate Iran's missile program, nuclear program, navy, and proxy funding, while Israel is pursuing broader regime‑change‑oriented operations including leadership assassinations.
- Officials describe the main point of friction so far as Israel’s bombing of Iranian oil storage tanks, after which the White House asked Israel not to hit oil again without U.S. approval, reflecting U.S. concern over global oil market stability.
- Article reports that Israel’s Mossad has attempted to stoke a Kurdish ground invasion from northern Iraq into Iran, an effort that has not materialized.
- Trump is portrayed as more personally aligned with Netanyahu’s "maximalist" objectives than many of his own aides, with daily calls and an ongoing campaign to secure Netanyahu a pardon in his corruption case.
- EU High Representative Kaja Kallas told Reuters the EU is consulting Gulf and regional countries (including Jordan and Egypt) about proposing a ‘face-saving’ path for Iran, Israel and the U.S. to end the war.
- Kallas explicitly stated that ‘nobody is ready to put their people in harm's way in the Strait of Hormuz,’ directly undercutting Trump’s weekend claim that many affected countries will send warships.
- Kallas said the EU wants to keep the strait open through ‘diplomatic ways’ to avoid food, fertilizer and energy crises, signaling a preference for diplomacy over naval deployments.
- The piece repeats Trump’s recent Truth Social claim that the U.S. has ‘destroyed 100% of Iran’s Military capability’ and his vow to ‘bomb the hell out of the shoreline’ and ‘continually’ shoot Iranian boats and ships to get Hormuz ‘OPEN, SAFE, and FREE.’
- Trump posted on Truth Social that 'most of our NATO Allies' have informed the U.S. they do not want to participate in the military operation against Iran.
- He characterized NATO as a 'one way street' where the U.S. spends 'Hundreds of Billions of Dollars per year' protecting allies who 'will do nothing for us, in particular, in a time of need.'
- Trump claimed U.S. strikes have 'decimated Iran’s Military,' asserting that Iran’s navy, air force, anti‑aircraft and radar systems, and 'leaders at virtually every level' are 'gone.'
- He declared that, due to this alleged military success, the U.S. 'no longer need[s], or desire[s], the NATO Countries’ assistance' and 'WE NEVER DID,' extending that dismissal to Japan, Australia and South Korea and saying 'WE DO NOT NEED THE HELP OF ANYONE.'
- EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas told Reuters that 'nobody is ready to put their people in harm's way in the Strait of Hormuz' and that the EU will seek 'diplomatic ways' to reopen the waterway rather than sending warships.
- Kallas said that while the EU remains allied with the U.S., European leaders 'don't really understand their moves recently' and now expect 'unpredictable things to happen all the time.'
- Israeli officials say two more senior Iranian figures were killed in overnight strikes, including Iran’s top security official Ali Larijani.
- The Pentagon now reports more than 200 U.S. service members injured and 13 killed during the war.
- Iranian officials say more than 1,300 people have been killed in Iran, while Iran’s retaliatory fire has killed at least 27 people in Gulf states and at least 12 people in Israel.
- CBS pegs crude oil prices as hovering around $100 a barrel due to the Hormuz disruptions, with U.S. gasoline prices continuing to rise.
- Axios reports that the Trump administration is seeking a broad coalition including the U.K., France, Germany, Italy, Australia, Canada, Gulf countries, Jordan, Japan and South Korea to send ships and other assets for a Hormuz mission, but leaders in Germany, Italy and Japan have already ruled out sending naval vessels.
- The piece says the U.K. has drafted a preliminary plan for how a multinational task force to secure shipping in and out of the Strait of Hormuz could be structured and has shared it with the U.S. and some allies, though it has not yet been circulated to all countries Trump is pressing to join.
- EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas, after meeting EU foreign ministers, is quoted saying 'there is no appetite' in the EU to join Trump's Hormuz coalition and 'this is not Europe's war,' signaling a bloc-wide reluctance.
- Trump is reported as telling reporters he is 'greatly disappointed' in some countries that are skeptical about partnering with the U.S. on Hormuz and warning in the Financial Times that it would be 'very bad' for NATO's future if allies do not step up.
- Axios sources describe the coalition effort as 'a mess' with 'a lot of people confused,' underscoring the lack of consensus and clarity over how the multinational task force would actually function.
- Trump, in new PBS‑cited remarks, said he has approached 'half-a-dozen' countries and singled out European allies and South Korea, emphasizing their dependence on Gulf energy ('South Korea gets 35 percent').
- A European official told PBS that while planning is ongoing, no European country is currently prepared to deploy military assets to secure the Persian Gulf during active hostilities.
- Trump linked his request to his broader criticism of NATO allies, saying the episode illustrates why he has long argued that NATO is structurally unfair and that the U.S. has protected countries that 'don’t protect us.'
- Trump tells PBS he is prepared to 'knock the hell out of' Iran’s Kharg Island in a future strike, after earlier attacks that destroyed military facilities there.
- He claims Kharg is now 'out of commission except for the pipes' and says he deliberately left about a 100‑yard buffer around oil infrastructure, emphasizing he has so far avoided hitting export facilities because of the years it would take to rebuild them.
- Trump says he could 'knock out the electric plants in one hour' in Iran but is trying to 'hold off on that kind of thing' to avoid long‑term trauma and rebuilding, offering a rare on‑the‑record description of his targeting calculus.
- He refuses to say whether U.S. ground troops might enter Iran, saying 'I don't wanna say that' and that he won’t discuss strategy with a reporter, while insisting his thinking has not changed.
- Trump predicts U.S. gasoline prices will 'drop like a rock' once the war ends but refuses to give a specific timeline, after previously predicting the war would last 'four to five weeks'; PBS notes its joint poll shows a majority of Americans disapprove of his handling of the war and oppose U.S. military action there.
- Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on March 16 that he has ‘demanded’ about seven countries send warships to keep the Strait of Hormuz open but so far has received no commitments.
- He claimed the shipping lane is ‘their own territory’ and said the U.S. does not need the strait because of its own access to oil, asserting that China gets about 90% of its oil through Hormuz while the U.S. gets only a minimal amount.
- Trump publicly singled out U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, saying Starmer initially declined to put British aircraft carriers ‘into harm’s way,’ and warned that whether or not countries back him, ‘We will remember.’
- Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told CBS that Iran has been approached by ‘a number of countries’ seeking safe passage, said groups of vessels from ‘different countries’ have been allowed through at Iran’s discretion, and reiterated that Iran sees no reason to talk with the U.S. about ending the war.
- Araghchi repeated Iran’s position that the Strait of Hormuz is open to all except the United States and its allies and said Tehran has ‘no plan to recover’ enriched uranium now lying under rubble after U.S. and Israeli strikes.
- Energy Secretary Chris Wright told NBC he has been ‘in dialogue’ with some of the countries Trump previously named and said he expects China ‘will be a constructive partner’ in reopening the strait, while Britain, Canada, South Korea and China issued cautious statements that stop short of committing ships.
- AP/PBS piece provides additional on‑the‑record comments from White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, explicitly tying any date shift to Trump’s desire to remain in Washington to oversee Operation Epic Fury.
- Article adds Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian’s public acknowledgment that Beijing and Washington are in communication about the trip and his framing of 'head‑of‑state diplomacy' as strategically important.
- Confirms that Bessent made his remarks in Paris after two days of trade talks with Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng and says a joint statement 'reaffirming the stability' of U.S.–China relations will be issued in coming days.
- Clarifies that the U.S.–China tariff 'truce' remains in place while both sides weigh the trip amid high‑stakes Iran war and oil‑market turmoil.
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in Paris that if Trump’s planned trip to Beijing is rescheduled, it would be for logistical reasons so the president can stay in Washington to manage the Iran war, not to pressure China over the Strait of Hormuz.
- Trump, in a Financial Times interview, explicitly said the U.S. would "like to know" before the trip whether Beijing will join a U.S.-led coalition to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and suggested "we may delay" the visit based on that.
- China’s Foreign Ministry said only that Beijing and Washington are in communication about Trump’s visit and stressed the "irreplaceable strategic guiding role" of head-of-state diplomacy in China–U.S. relations.
- Bessent said he had "a very good two days" of talks in Paris with Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng and that a joint statement "reaffirming the stability" between the two countries would be issued in the coming days.
- Fox article specifies that Trump’s warning was delivered in an interview with The Financial Times and reiterated in a press gaggle aboard Air Force One while returning from Mar‑a‑Lago.
- Trump characterizes the requested mission as 'a very small endeavor' and says it would be 'interesting to see what country wouldn't help us' with 'just keeping the Strait open,' explicitly asserting that 'Iran has very little firepower.'
- Trump again stresses that the U.S. is now a net exporter of oil and 'gets only a fraction' of its oil from the Middle East, contrasting that with NATO allies’ dependence.
- Current U.S. Ambassador to NATO Matt Whitaker is quoted as claiming the Trump administration has gotten NATO to commit 5% of GDP to defense spending, a specific (and controversial) metric not mentioned in the prior summary.
- NPR specifies that in a late-Sunday Financial Times interview, Trump said allies’ failure to send warships to the Strait of Hormuz would 'be very bad for the future of NATO' and that the U.S. would 'remember' if NATO counterparts did not help.
- EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas says she has spoken with U.N. Secretary General António Guterres about unblocking the Strait and that the EU is discussing what it can do 'from the European side.'
- Downing Street confirms U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer spoke with Trump about reopening the strait, while British Energy Secretary Ed Miliband says all options to help reopen it are being examined with allies; Starmer plans a press conference later Monday.
- Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi tells parliament that Japan has made 'no decisions whatsoever' on dispatching escort ships, stressing any operations in the Strait must pass Japan’s strict legal limits on overseas deployments and will be examined within that framework.
- South Korea says it is considering Trump’s request; Australia says it has not been asked and will not send ships.
- China’s Foreign Ministry reiterates only that keeping the Strait open is important for trade and calls for an end to hostilities, as Trump hints his planned late‑month China visit could be cancelled depending on Beijing’s decision on sending warships.
- NPR updates the economic context, reporting oil near $105 a barrel on Monday as the war enters its third week.
- The article notes that the IDF has 'begun limited and targeted ground operations' against Hezbollah strongholds in southern Lebanon and reports heavy bombing in Tehran, alongside fresh Iranian missile launches toward Israel.
- Trump told The Financial Times that NATO members should help open the Strait of Hormuz or face a 'very bad' future for the alliance, explicitly tying their response to NATO’s 'future.'
- Trump said China should help unblock the Strait and threatened to postpone his planned April summit in Beijing with Xi Jinping if China does not cooperate.
- China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian said both sides are still discussing Trump’s trip and claimed China is committed to de-escalation in the Middle East while maintaining communication with 'all relevant parties.'
- Australia’s transport minister, Catherine King, said Australia does not intend to send ships to the Strait, signaling allied reluctance to join U.S.-led escorts.
- The live updates reiterate that Iran is allowing oil shipments to China through the strait while other tankers have been attacked by projectiles, underlining a selective blockade.
- The Israeli military announced a 'broad wave of attacks' on government infrastructure in Tehran, including renewed airstrikes on Mehrabad Airport.
- Kataib Hezbollah claimed two drone strikes on the U.S. diplomatic logistics site at Baghdad International Airport, which an Iraqi official said were intercepted.
- Dubai International Airport briefly suspended flights after a 'drone-related incident' ignited a nearby fuel tank, and Abu Dhabi authorities reported a missile strike on a civilian vehicle that killed a Palestinian national.
- The article updates the reported death tolls to at least 1,348 civilians killed in Iran, about 850 in Lebanon, at least 12 in Israel, and 13 U.S. service members since the war began.
- White House is branding the planned multinational naval effort as a 'Hormuz Coalition', and Trump expects some countries to publicly announce participation this week even though none have yet committed.
- Axios reports Trump and senior aides spent the prior weekend on the phone with European, Gulf and Asian partners, including a call with U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, to line up political commitments for the coalition.
- Trump is explicitly pressing Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and China’s Xi Jinping to join, suggesting he may delay his planned Beijing summit if China does not engage, and warning NATO allies that refusing could be 'very bad for the future of NATO.'
- Senior U.S. officials say Trump is actively weighing a potential seizure of Iran’s Kharg Island oil terminal—with U.S. 'boots on the ground'—if the Hormuz shutdown persists, viewing control of the island as a potential 'economic knockout' of Tehran.
- Officials acknowledge such a seizure would carry 'big risks,' including likely Iranian retaliation against oil facilities and pipelines across Gulf states, especially Saudi Arabia.
- A senior White House official insists Trump has so far only ordered air and missile strikes on military installations on Kharg while sparing oil facilities, but says 'that could change' if efforts to reopen the strait stall.
- Trump has told reporters he believes Iran now has 'very little firepower' left and that the coalition mission would be 'small,' framing it as other oil-importing countries’ responsibility because most of the crude at stake is not U.S.-bound.
- Sen. Lindsey Graham publicly praises Trump’s Kharg campaign, calling the island a 'single target' that could 'dramatically alter the outcome of the conflict' and saying 'he who controls Kharg Island, controls the destiny of this war.'
- WSJ reports the Trump administration plans to announce as soon as this week that multiple countries have agreed to form a coalition to escort ships through the Strait of Hormuz.
- U.S. and potential coalition countries are still debating whether escort operations would begin before or after the war formally ends.
- The article underscores that many countries remain publicly noncommittal about joining escorts until hostilities cease, largely due to the risks from Iranian mines in the strait.
- The piece highlights growing internal Republican Party questions about the war’s ‘endgame’ as gasoline prices continue to rise, despite more than 6,000 Iranian targets being struck, including the killing of Iran’s supreme leader and senior officials.
- Confirms that as of Sunday, no countries have formally committed warships in response to President Trump’s public appeal to China, France, Japan, South Korea, Britain and others to send naval forces to the Strait of Hormuz.
- U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright told NBC he has been “in dialogue” with some of those countries and said he expected China “will be a constructive partner” in reopening the strait.
- Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told CBS that Iran has been approached by multiple countries seeking safe passage and that its military decides which vessels may transit; he reiterated Iran’s stance that the strait is open to all except the United States and its allies and said Tehran sees no reason to talk with Washington about ending the war.
- The International Energy Agency updated its emergency action from 400 million to nearly 412 million barrels of oil, saying Asian members will release stocks immediately while reserves from Europe and the Americas will start flowing from the end of March.
- The article reports new rounds of missile and drone attacks claimed or attributed in Gulf Arab states (Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, UAE) after Iran called for evacuations around three major UAE ports and accused the U.S., without evidence, of launching Kharg Island strikes from Emirati territory—an allegation the UAE publicly rejected.
- Energy Secretary Chris Wright told ABC’s 'This Week' there are 'no guarantees' oil prices will come down in the coming weeks and tied that explicitly to the realities of wartime.
- Trump posted on Truth Social that 'Countries of the World that receive Oil through the Hormuz Strait must take care of that passage, and we will help — A LOT!', framing a burden‑sharing push where the U.S. coordinates but does not act alone.
- Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told MS NOW that the Strait of Hormuz route is 'only closed to US and Israeli ships,' suggesting Tehran is trying to claim continued access for other countries.
- The article pegs average U.S. gasoline prices at roughly $3.67 per gallon, up from $2.93 last month, quantifying the domestic price surge.
- The report reiterates the identification of six U.S. service members killed in a KC‑135 refueling‑aircraft crash in Iraq as part of the war’s growing U.S. death toll.
- The IRGC, via IRNA, vowed to 'pursue and kill' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu 'with full force,' an escalatory personalized threat.
- Chris Wright said flatly on NBC’s 'Meet the Press' that the Strait of Hormuz is 'not' safe for tanker passage right now.
- He avoided naming any specific foreign governments that have agreed to send warships, even as Trump has publicly listed China, France, Japan and South Korea.
- U.S. officials told the Times Iran appears to be allowing some tankers through, including those carrying oil to China, suggesting a selective closure rather than an absolute one.
- Trump, in new Truth Social posts Saturday, claims the U.S. has 'already destroyed 100% of Iran's Military capability,' while acknowledging Iran can still use drones, sea mines and short‑range missiles to threaten the Strait of Hormuz.
- Trump explicitly names China, France, Japan, South Korea and the United Kingdom, among others, as countries he says 'will be sending War Ships' with the U.S. to keep the strait open and safe, though none have publicly committed to do so.
- He vows that in the meantime the U.S. will be 'bombing the hell out of the shoreline' and 'continually shooting Iranian Boats and Ships out of the water' until the strait is 'OPEN, SAFE, and FREE.'
- In a follow‑up post, Trump says countries that receive oil through the strait 'must take care of that passage, and we will help — A LOT!' framing this as a 'team effort' that 'should have always' been shared and asserting the U.S. has 'completely decimated Iran, both Militarily, Economically, and in every other way.'
- Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi tells MS Now that China and Russia are 'strategic partners' providing 'military cooperation' to Iran, and claims the Strait of Hormuz is open to all ships except those belonging to 'our enemies,' namely the U.S. and Israel.
- The piece emphasizes that, as of publication, none of the countries Trump named had publicly indicated they would send warships in response to his call.
- Trump’s latest social‑media post on Saturday says countries that receive oil through the Strait of Hormuz "must take care of that passage, and we will help — A LOT!", reinforcing his call for other navies to send warships.
- Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps issued a statement Saturday declaring that the Strait of Hormuz is under its "full control" and warning that "any attempt to move or transit will be targeted."
- The U.S. State Department has ordered nonessential U.S. government employees and family members to leave Oman due to safety risks from the U.S.–Israel war against Iran, after Iranian missiles or drones hit sites there.
- The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad again urged all American citizens to leave Iraq immediately after Iran‑backed militias attacked the embassy compound for the second time since the war began.
- Updated death tolls: Iran’s U.N. representative now says at least 1,348 civilians have been killed in Iran; Lebanese officials report 826 killed and over 2,000 injured; Israeli officials report at least 12 people killed.
- The article confirms that Iranian missiles triggered air‑raid sirens in Israel without reports of serious casualties, and that Saudi Arabia intercepted drones near Riyadh and in an eastern province.
- Regional authorities report an attack on the consulate general of the United Arab Emirates in Iraq’s Kurdistan region, injuring two guards and damaging the building.
- Gulf countries reported new attacks Sunday morning, including sirens in Bahrain and a reported missile attack in the United Arab Emirates with authorities urging residents to shelter in safe locations.
- Saudi Arabia’s Defense Ministry said its systems intercepted and destroyed 10 drones over Riyadh and the kingdom’s eastern region.
- The IRGC, via state‑run IRNA, issued an explicit threat to hunt down and kill Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying it would "continue to pursue and kill him with full force" if he is still alive.
- Israel’s military said early Sunday that Iran launched another barrage of missiles toward Israel, with sirens sounding in Tel Aviv and loud booms heard.
- Iran’s joint military command claimed, without evidence, that copycat versions of its Shahed‑136 drones (referred to as LUCAS) were used to hit targets in Turkey, Iraq and Kuwait in order to frame Tehran, and insisted Iran only targets U.S. and Israeli interests.
- UAE presidential adviser Anwar Gargash publicly criticized Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi’s accusation that the U.S. used UAE territory to strike Kharg Island, calling it a policy that "missed the point, lost its direction, and lacked wisdom."
- The piece reiterates that President Trump is calling on allies to send warships to secure the Strait of Hormuz while the war shows no signs of ending.
- The article briefly notes the Pentagon’s identification of the six U.S. airmen killed in the KC‑135 crash supporting operations against Iran, tying that casualty event back into the broader war coverage.
- Gulf states reported new missile and drone attacks on Sunday after Iran threatened to widen its campaign and called for evacuations at three major ports in the United Arab Emirates, explicitly threatening a neighboring country’s non‑U.S. assets for the first time.
- Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi accused the U.S. of attacking Kharg Island and Abu Musa Island from two locations in the UAE — Ras Al Khaimah and an area ‘very close to Dubai’ — while saying Iran would try to avoid ‘any populated area’ in the UAE in its retaliation.
- Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and the UAE publicly warned residents they were working to intercept incoming projectiles amid these latest barrages.
- Araghchi said the Strait of Hormuz was closed only to ‘those who are attacking us and their allies,’ signaling a selective closure rather than an officially declared blanket shutdown.
- Iran’s semi‑official Fars news agency claimed the U.S. strikes on Kharg Island damaged air-defense, naval and aviation facilities but left oil infrastructure intact.
- Updated humanitarian tolls: over 800 people killed and 850,000 displaced in Lebanon as Israel intensifies strikes on Hezbollah, and at least a dozen civilians killed in Gulf states by Iranian strikes, most of them migrant workers.
- The article reiterates that at least 13 U.S. service members have been killed since the war began, including seven in combat and six in a plane crash over Iraq, and notes the Pentagon has just identified the six killed in the KC‑135 crash while supporting operations against Iran.
- Trump used a Truth Social post on March 14, 2026 to urge China, France, Japan, South Korea, the U.K. and other affected nations to send warships to the Middle East to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
- In the same post, Trump vowed that the U.S. would "bomb the hell out of the shoreline" and "continually" shoot Iranian boats and ships "out of the water" while Hormuz remains closed.
- CENTCOM confirmed that U.S. forces struck more than 90 military targets on Iran’s Kharg Island on Friday, including naval mine storage facilities and missile storage bunkers, while explicitly leaving the island’s oil infrastructure intact.
- Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps stated that its navy remains in control of the Strait of Hormuz, warned that any attempt to move or transit there "will be targeted," and claimed a right to strike U.S. interests in the United Arab Emirates, urging civilians to evacuate ports and U.S. military shelters.
- An MS NOW interview with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi aired Saturday in which he called the U.S. campaign an "unprovoked, unwarranted, illegal act of aggression" and said Iran is targeting only U.S. bases, assets and interests under an "eye for an eye" principle.
- A U.S. official told MS NOW that the United States is sending up to 5,000 additional personnel, including the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit and several more ships, to the Arabian Sea as the Navy prepares to start tanker escorts "very soon."
- The piece notes that the helipad at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad was struck Friday, though responsibility has not been claimed, underscoring spillover risks to U.S. diplomatic facilities.
- The article updates the regional toll, reporting more than 2,000 people killed in the Middle East since the war began, with deaths heaviest in Iran and Lebanon amid a growing humanitarian crisis tied to Israeli attacks on Hezbollah.