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European Oil Markets
1JUN

CENTCOM Gulf blockade tally reaches 127

2 min read
09:19UTC

A CENTCOM Hellfire crippled the tanker M/T Lexie bound for Kharg Island on 2 June, lifting the Gulf blockade tally to 127 vessels redirected and six disabled.

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Key takeaway

A CENTCOM Hellfire disabled the M/T Lexie, lifting the Gulf blockade tally to 127 redirected and six disabled.

US Central Command (CENTCOM), the American military command for the Middle East, disabled the tanker M/T Lexie with a Hellfire missile on 2 June while the vessel was bound for Kharg Island, Iran's main oil-export terminal 1. The strike brought CENTCOM's running blockade tally to 127 vessels redirected and six disabled, up from 121 redirections recorded on 1 June . CENTCOM has been intercepting and turning back commercial traffic in the strait of Hormuz, the 33-kilometre chokepoint through which much of the Gulf's oil moves.

The Lexie is the latest in a sequence of munition-based interdictions rather than warnings or boardings, and each one feeds the war-risk premium underwriters charge on Gulf transits. Higher premiums raise the cost of every cargo that still moves through the strait and deepen the squeeze on Iran's already shrinking seaborne oil exports. The blockade is a physical enforcement act stacking up alongside the week's signed sanctions, a counterweight to the verbal claim that a deal is nearly done.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

CENTCOM, the US military command covering the Middle East, has been enforcing a blockade in the Gulf to stop ships delivering supplies to Iran or removing Iranian oil. Under this blockade, US forces intercept vessels, warn them not to proceed, and redirect them away from Iranian ports. When a ship ignores those warnings, CENTCOM has started disabling them using Hellfire missiles, originally designed as air-to-ground weapons. On 2 June a tanker called the M/T Lexie ignored warnings while heading to Kharg Island, Iran's main oil export terminal, and was struck and disabled. CENTCOM has now disabled six hulls by Hellfire missile since the blockade began in early March. Each disabled vessel raises the insurance cost for every ship in the region. Lloyd's of London and other marine insurers calculate war-risk premiums based on the frequency of armed incidents in a given area. Six disabled hulls by munition in 100 days places the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly one-fifth of global oil flows, in the highest war-risk tier. Those premiums feed into the cost of shipping everything from crude oil to grain to consumer goods, adding to price pressures globally.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Hellfire interdiction method emerged from a specific legal and operational constraint: boarding operations are slow, risk casualties on both sides, and require a prize crew to accompany captured vessels. Hellfire disabling of engine rooms removes the vessel from the transit path with no US personnel exposure and no prize-crew obligation.

CENTCOM adopted the tactic after the first boarding operations in March drew complaints from flag-state governments about seizure under international maritime law. The disabled-hull approach creates its own legal question: whether disabling a civilian vessel in international waters constitutes an act of war against the flag state, a question no belligerent government has yet tested in court.

First Reported In

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