Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Maritime Freedom Construct
OrganisationUS

Maritime Freedom Construct

US State Department and CENTCOM diplomatic hub for Hormuz transit coordination, launched April 2026 without named members.

Last refreshed: 1 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Which countries have joined the Maritime Freedom Construct for Hormuz?

Timeline for Maritime Freedom Construct

#872 May

US-led initiative operating in parallel with still no named member states

Iran Conflict 2026: Mentioned in: Iran's Majlis ratifies 12-article Hormuz sovereignty law
View full timeline →
Common Questions
What is the Maritime Freedom Construct?
The MFC is a US State Department and CENTCOM diplomatic hub launched on 30 April 2026 to coordinate SAFE passage through the Strait of Hormuz; no member countries were named at launch.Source: Lowdown
Which countries have joined the Maritime Freedom Construct?
No member countries were named when the MFC launched on 30 April 2026; the founding instrument was a diplomatic cable, not a multilateral treaty.Source: Lowdown
How is the Maritime Freedom Construct different from Operation Earnest Will?
Operation Earnest Will (1987-88) had named participating states and provided active naval escorts; the MFC at launch is a coordination and information hub with no named members and no signed framework.Source: Lowdown
What is the European alternative to the US Maritime Freedom Construct for Hormuz?
European countries are developing a separate Strait of Hormuz Maritime Freedom of Navigation Initiative that includes a signed rules-of-engagement framework, distinct from the US-led MFC.Source: Lowdown

Background

The Maritime Freedom Construct (MFC) was launched on 30 April 2026 by the US State Department alongside CENTCOM, the same day Iranian Supreme Leader Khamenei announced 'new management' of the Strait of Hormuz . The MFC is described as a diplomatic hub to provide real-time information, safety guidance, and coordination for vessels transiting the Strait. No member countries were named at launch; no framework document was signed; the founding instrument was a diplomatic cable. The announcement was timed as a direct counter to Khamenei's statement, placing competing Hormuz governance claims on the same calendar day .

The MFC is distinct from a parallel European-led effort, the Strait of Hormuz Maritime Freedom of Navigation Initiative, which is working toward a signed rules-of-engagement framework. The MFC is modelled loosely on prior US Navy-led maritime coalitions, most directly Operation Earnest Will (1987-88), in which the US provided naval escorts for Kuwaiti tankers through the Gulf during the Iran-Iraq Tanker War. Earnest Will had named participating states; the MFC at launch does not.

The documentation race between the MFC and the European initiative is strategically significant: whichever framework names members and publishes operational rules first will define which legal architecture prices Hormuz transit risk for global shipping insurers and P&I clubs. As of 30 April 2026, CENTCOM had redirected or turned around 44 commercial vessels carrying 69 million barrels of crude . The MFC's operational value depends on whether sufficient partners join to staff a functioning coordination hub before Iran-Oman toll negotiations produce a rival bilateral framework.

Source Material