Skip to content

Three Tankers Make It Through Strait of Hormuz without Iranian Approval

Three tankers appear to have passed through the Strait of Hormuz without sailing through the corridor approved by the Iranian regime

The UN Security Council is due to meet today to discuss the ongoing crisis in the Strait of Hormuz

Three Tankers Make It Through Strait of Hormuz without Iranian Approval Image Credit: Kaveh Kazemi / Contributor / Getty Images
SHARE
LIVE
gab

Three tankers appear to have passed through the Strait of Hormuz without sailing through the corridor approved by the Iranian regime.

Two oil tankers and a liquified-natural-gas (LNG) tanker exited the Strait and are now stationed off the coast of Oman, according to the website VesselFinder.

At least one of the ships is Omani-owned.

“Omani ships are attempting to sail out of the Middle East Gulf, and if successful, will be the first vessels in nearly three weeks to transit the chokepoint without sailing via the ‘Tehran-approved’ corridor,” shipping news outlet Lloyd’s List wrote in an April 2 post on X.

The ships hugged the northern Omani coastline, off the Musandam governorate, which is not considered to be a “conventional shipping lane.”

In doing so, they avoided Iran’s “tollbooth” lane, between the islands of Larak Qeshm.

The Epoch Times reports, “In peacetime, vessels use a two-lane shipping channel in the middle of the Strait of Hormuz, but due to the war, ships are currently forced to take a diversion to the north, around Larak Island, placing them in Iranian territorial waters so they effectively pass through a ‘tollbooth.’

“Lloyd’s List Intelligence says vessel owners contact ‘approved intermediaries’ of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), receive a code, and are escorted by an IRGC vessel.”

Iran has been accepting payments in Chinese Yuan for passage through its approved corridor and also appears to have developed the capacity to accept payments in cryptocurrency.

The UN Security Council is due to meet today to discuss the ongoing crisis in the Strait of Hormuz.

Twenty percent of the world’s oil and natural gases passes through the Strait under normal conditions.


BREAKING VIDEO: “The Things I’ve Seen, You’d Be Up At Night Thinking About It… This Country Would Come Unglued If They Heard All That I Heard!”


Get 40% OFF our fan-favorite drink mix Vitamin Mineral Fusion NOW at the Infowars Store!
SHARE
LIVE
gab