Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters on Thursday 21 May that any Iranian toll system at the strait of Hormuz "can't happen, it would be unacceptable and it would make a diplomatic deal unfeasible", adding that the mechanism is "completely illegal" 1. The National News carried the remarks. It is the first time a cabinet officer has named the Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA) architecture by function as an absolute red line on the record. The US position hardens at the exact moment Iran's claim moves into cartography.
Pakistan Army Chief Asim Munir was due in Tehran on the same day and cancelled the trip. Pakistani media analysis citing Iranian commentators identified three issues blocking the visit 2: the uranium stockpile, where Trump wants it out of Iran and Khamenei has now ordered it stays; the sequencing of any deal, with Iran wanting a 30-day ceasefire and blockade lift before nuclear talks while Washington wants nuclear concessions first; and Hormuz tolls , called a deal-killer by Rubio the same day Munir was meant to fly. Pakistan's Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi made a second Tehran visit in a week as a relay, not as a mediator.
Tehran's coordinate publication on 20 May had moved the Hormuz dispute onto a chart the day before Rubio's remarks. Rubio's red line therefore arrives at the point of maximum diplomatic cost: the Pakistan relay had been the channel where the toll question might have been parked for later sequencing. With Iran's chart on one side and a US cabinet officer on the other, the relay loses its only remaining bridge.
Three actors moved on Thursday: the US named its red line, Iran moved its claim onto a chart, and Pakistan removed the senior officer with a bridging mandate. The Lloyd's market consequence runs through the Joint Hull Committee's coalition-ROE precondition , which now collides with PGSA-published coordinates the coalition cannot endorse without conceding sovereignty. Nobody currently in the room has a mandate that survives that collision.
