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IRGC strikes GFS Galaxy, shuts Hormuz

3 min read
10:13UTC

The IRGC Navy struck the container ship GFS Galaxy in the Strait of Hormuz early on 12 July, left one of eleven Indian crew missing and declared the waterway closed until further notice.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran declared Hormuz closed after striking the GFS Galaxy; insurers, not warships, keep the lane empty.

Early on 12 July the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Navy, the naval arm of Iran's ideological military force, attacked the Cyprus-flagged container ship GFS Galaxy in the Strait of Hormuz and left its engine room heavily damaged, according to Gulf wire coverage 1. Ten of the eleven Indian crew were rescued; one remains missing 2. The IRGC Navy then declared the strait, the 33km channel carrying about a fifth of the world's seaborne oil, closed until further notice.

The Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA), the Iranian body that asserts control over Hormuz passage, posted on X that transit was currently not possible, blaming recent illegal movements of US forces 3. Both statements reached us through Iranian state media relayed by English aggregators, not direct Farsi primary sources.

Nine days earlier Muscat and Tehran had agreed to jointly steward Hormuz traffic as daily transits fell to two ; the 12 July closure overrides that quiet accommodation and operationalises the Hormuz leverage Russia's Dmitry Medvedev likened to a nuclear weapon at Ali Khamenei's funeral . It also hardens the corridor's first live strike, the IRGC hit on the Qatari carrier Al Rekayyat a week earlier , from a one-off punishment into a standing prohibition. What empties the lane is the insurance market, not the Iranian navy: war-risk underwriters and the International Group of P&I Clubs, which held their Hormuz war-risk exclusion through that earlier strike , price a contested legal status as harshly as a lawful blockade, so a declaration Tehran cannot lawfully impose still keeps cargoes off the water.

English-language wires name one struck vessel, the GFS Galaxy; Al Jazeera Arabic's readout of the CENTCOM response counts three commercial vessels attacked in the strait 4. Neither outlet has reconciled the two counts, and a translation difference does not explain the gap. No English-language primary source has confirmed the higher figure.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, an elite branch of Iran's military separate from its regular navy) attacked a commercial container ship called the GFS Galaxy, which flies the flag of Cyprus, as it passed through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway between Iran and Oman that a large share of the world's seaborne oil and gas passes through. The attack badly damaged the ship's engine room. Iran then declared the whole strait closed until further notice, on 12 July. Of the 11 Indian crew members aboard, ten were rescued but one remains missing. Iran's own maritime authority, the Persian Gulf Strait Authority, publicly confirmed that ships could not currently get through, a rare case of Iran's government stating outright that it was blocking a major international shipping route.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran signed the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea but never ratified it, so the convention's Part III guarantee of transit passage through international straits does not bind Tehran as treaty law. Iran instead applies its own maritime security statute, which reserves the right to inspect or exclude vessels it links to hostile states.

That gap between the customary practice most flag states still observe and Iran's domestic statute is what turns a closure declaration into something more than rhetoric: there is no binding instrument Iran is violating by making the claim, only a customary norm it is choosing to disregard.

First Reported In

Update #153 · Iran declares Hormuz closed; US says open

Gulf News· 13 Jul 2026
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