Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
24MAY

Northwood drafts Hormuz rules without Gulf signatures

3 min read
14:49UTC

UK-hosted planners at Permanent Joint Headquarters opened the summit to draft rules of engagement for the 51-nation Hormuz initiative on 20 April. The United States is not at the table, and no Gulf state has signed on.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Northwood is drafting Hormuz rules of engagement that no Gulf state has signed and no US seat endorses.

Planners convened at Northwood, the UK Permanent Joint Headquarters, on 20 April to draft rules of engagement for the 51-nation Hormuz freedom-of-navigation coalition , . Washington declined a seat at the table, and Saudi Arabia and the wider Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) have not signed on.

Both constraints have already been set elsewhere. The Paris posture tied operational activation to whatever ceasefire architecture eventually emerges, with deployment conditional on ceasefire conditions being met. IMO Secretary-General Dominguez's 17 April statement anchored the legal position by surfacing the 1968 tripartite framework the new rules would have to either inherit or override. The Grossi principle from the nuclear track applies equally at sea : enforcement without coastal signatures is rules a boarded vessel's flag-state lawyer can challenge on the Dominguez statement alone.

The practical question Northwood faces is whether a British or French warship can stop a vessel under the new rules without a Gulf coastguard coordinating the stop. Without Gulf signatures the coordination is missing, which means every boarding becomes a bilateral diplomatic event between the flag state and the stopping state. Underwriters will price that friction into hull risk; commercial operators will route around it.

A dissenting read inside European defence ministries is that the absence of US participation is a feature rather than a flaw, because a mission without American framing preserves the European diplomatic space to negotiate with Tehran in parallel. That argument has merit; it also leaves a draft rulebook whose citable authority is currently thinner than the political ambition behind it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Britain and France are running a summit at Northwood (the UK's military command headquarters) to write the rules for a 51-nation maritime mission in the Strait of Hormuz, with the goal of protecting ships passing through the strait. Two significant gaps constrain its authority. Washington chose not to join the Macron-Starmer maritime initiative, so the US Navy operates outside the framework it will enforce. Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf Arab states, which depend heavily on the strait for their own oil exports, have not signed on either. Perhaps most constraining: the rules Northwood writes this week must work alongside a 58-year-old agreement between Iran, Oman and the United Nations that governs Hormuz traffic, and nobody can simply override it.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Paris posture's 'when conditions are met' language bound the Northwood mission to whatever ceasefire architecture emerges from the Munir-Tehran channel. Northwood planners are therefore writing rules of engagement for a ceasefire-contingent mission without knowing whether the ceasefire will hold past 22 April.

The US absence is both structural (Washington chose not to participate in the Macron-Starmer maritime format) and practical: any US seat would make the initiative look like a NATO operation, reducing its credibility with non-aligned states that the 51-nation coalition needs to sustain legitimacy in post-ceasefire Hormuz governance.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Northwood's rules-of-engagement text, if it writes around rather than through the 1968 Traffic Separation Scheme, will lack the legal backing of the only extant signed tripartite Hormuz instrument.

  • Opportunity

    If the ceasefire holds past 22 April, the Northwood framework becomes the starting point for permanent Hormuz governance negotiations, giving the UK and France disproportionate influence over the post-war maritime architecture.

First Reported In

Update #74 · Two unsigned rulebooks collide at Hormuz

International Maritime Organization· 20 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Northwood drafts Hormuz rules without Gulf signatures
Rules of engagement written without littoral signatures are rules a warship cannot cite when challenged. Northwood's output will inherit a political ceiling set in Paris and a legal ceiling set at the IMO before any operational decisions are taken.
Different Perspectives
Civilians and prisoners inside Iran
Civilians and prisoners inside Iran
Mojtaba Kian was hanged in under 50 days from arrest, the fastest wartime espionage case in Hengaw's record, as Trump announced a peace deal. Amnesty places Iran's 2026 execution count above 200 at its fastest pace in 44 years; the diplomatic track has not altered the internal enforcement tempo.
China
China
Beijing accepted a Pakistani civilian briefing mission on the same day OFAC's GL V expired, keeping itself inside the deal architecture without being a named signatory. How Chinese banks respond to Monday's Hengli dollar-clearing decision is the first real-world test of whether the verbal MOU carries any institutional weight.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Islamabad split its highest-level delegation: army chief Munir to Tehran on the security track, Prime Minister Sharif and Foreign Minister Dar to Beijing before Monday's GL V-driven bank compliance decision. The architecture routes the deal's hardest problem, IRGC buy-in, through the general-officer channel that has extracted every wartime concession.
Israeli government
Israeli government
An unnamed Israeli official told the Times of Israel that Trump privately told Netanyahu the deal will dismantle Iran's nuclear programme and remove all its uranium, terms incompatible with what Tehran and a Reuters source describe. If Netanyahu believes he was promised full dismantlement and the deal delivers less, Israel holds a sabotage veto before any signature.
Iranian Foreign Ministry
Iranian Foreign Ministry
Spokesman Esmail Baghaei told state agency IRNA that nuclear issues are 'not in the current negotiations text' and the sequencing is: end the war first, then negotiate nuclear over two months. Baghaei's formulation preserves Khamenei's 21 May uranium-stay directive while letting the civilian diplomacy track continue.
Donald Trump / White House
Donald Trump / White House
Trump declared the Iran deal 'largely negotiated' on 23 May via Truth Social and signed nothing; the White House's only paper was a Memorial Day proclamation. The verbal-track method converts maximum political signalling into minimum legal exposure: no congressional notification, no Senate treaty ratification, no instrument for Iran to formally reject.