The oil tanker Olympic Life was struck by an unidentified projectile on 26 May, roughly 60 nautical miles east of the strait of Hormuz near Muscat, the Omani capital 1. The hull breach discharged bunker fuel into The Gulf of Oman; no crew were injured. No party has claimed the attack, and the location sits outside Iran's declared transit zone.
This is the first reported hull strike near the strait's eastern mouth. War-risk cover already runs at $10-14 million per voyage through Hormuz, the premium underwriters charge to insure a ship against attack. A hit well beyond the strait forces them to price danger onto routes that were treated as safe, widening the war-risk geography rather than tightening it.
The strike landed the same day CENTCOM, US Central Command, destroyed IRGC mine-laying boats and a surface-to-air missile site at Bandar Abbas, Iran's main naval base on the strait . The timing invites a link to retaliation by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, but no party has produced evidence, and assigning blame here would be guesswork.
East of the strait, where neither CENTCOM's blockade order nor Iran's transit-zone authority formally runs, an unclaimed strike means no actor owns the risk and no deterrent has an address. That ambiguity tends to push insurance premiums higher than a claimed attack would, because there is no one to warn off and no incident to bound. The vacuum itself does the work the projectile could not.
