Oman granted the United Kingdom and France permission to clear mines on its southern Strait of Hormuz route shortly before 7 July, and officials said clearance could begin as soon as that week 1. An early-morning attack on a Qatari-owned liquefied-natural-gas carrier in the strait on 7 July set the timeline back before clearance began.
the strait of Hormuz is the narrow Gulf chokepoint through which much of the world's seaborne oil and gas passes. RFA Lyme Bay, the Royal Navy mother ship, sits in Omani waters with RNMB Ariadne and its autonomous mine-hunting systems aboard, HMS Dragon and French assets alongside, holding for a military order that has not come . RNMB Ariadne passed its trials off Portland and Gibraltar, and France's Sirius minehunting USV embarked at Toulon in June ; the missing piece now is a national military order, gated by Oman's consent, Iran's objections and allied domestic timelines.
Iran's deputy foreign minister, Kazem Gharibabadi, insists mine clearance is Iran's sole responsibility and has warned Oman against outside interference 2. The conflict itself belongs to Lowdown's Iran-conflict file; the industry beat here is narrower, that permission for an autonomous clearance debut was granted and then overtaken by events. Around 80 Iranian sea mines are thought to remain, Italy's Joint Operations Command estimates two months to clear once work starts, and the International Maritime Organization (IMO) says roughly 500 stranded ships must be evacuated first 3.
