Thursday, April 9, 2026 - Iran has warned foreign ships on Wednesday, April 8, that they will be “destroyed” if they attempt to cross the Strait of Hormuz without permission from Tehran.
“You must receive permission from the Iranian Sepah Navy for
passing through the Strait. If any vessel tries to transit without permission,
will be destroyed,” an Iranian official was heard saying in audio shared with
the Wall Street Journal by a crew member.
The threat comes despite President Trump announcing late
Tuesday that Iran agreed to the “COMPLETE, IMMEDIATE, and SAFE OPENING of the
Strait of Hormuz,” through which over a fifth of the world’s seaborne oil flows
annually.
The opening of the Strait was a key condition of the Iran
war cease-fire agreement as fuel prices have surged worldwide in the wake of
Iran’s closure of the crucial chokepoint.
Tehran had used missiles and drones to wreak havoc on the
strait in retaliation against the joint US-Israeli strikes on its country to
exact a toll on the global economy.
The cease-fire Trump unveiled on Tuesday lasts for two weeks
as the two sides negotiate a longer-term solution to end the war that began on
Feb. 28.
A senior Iranian official involved in the talks said the
strait could be reopened in a “limited” way under Iran’s control on Thursday or
Friday and that “coordinating with the Iranian military will be mandatory for
all ships.”
“If an understanding on a framework for talks is reached,
the strait could be opened, limited, under Iran’s control,” the official told
Reuters. “Coordinating with Iranian military will be mandatory for all ships.
“Still, the cease-fire is fragile; however, we prefer
lasting peace, but Iran has no fear to return to war if the US wants to go the
same way,” the official warned.
In a press conference on Wednesday, Secretary of War Pete
Hegseth insisted the strait was open and “commerce will flow.”
“What has been agreed to, what’s been stated, is the strait
is open. Our military is watching, sure, their military is watching, but
commerce will flow,” he told reporters.
He added that the military would be “hanging around” in the
Middle East to ensure Iran complies with the cease-fire.

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