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Iran Conflict 2026
14JUN

Northwood drafts Hormuz rules without Gulf signatures

3 min read
11:42UTC

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.

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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
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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
Qatar (mediator)
Qatar (mediator)
Qatari negotiators flew to Tehran on Sunday morning to close remaining gaps between the parties, operating as the primary shuttle channel. Qatar's role is to bridge the civilian-track gap the IRGC veto has left.
IAEA / Rafael Grossi
IAEA / Rafael Grossi
Grossi replied to Araghchi's 13 June protection-of-materials letter the same day, citing Iran's NPT Safeguards Agreement obligation to declare any nuclear material transfer. With 97 days of lost inspector access and approximately 240 kg unaccounted, Grossi has treaty text and no inspectors on the ground to enforce it.
United Arab Emirates
United Arab Emirates
The UAE state oil company assessed full Hormuz flows will not resume until 2027 even with a fast deal, citing demining, inspection, and insurance timelines. The UAE ambassador to Washington said a simple ceasefire is not enough.
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
The IRGC ran naval exercises in Hormuz during Geneva talks and its political deputy declared Iran was negotiating from a position of strength. The corps has not endorsed the MoU; by amplifying Mashhad protests through Fars, it is framing any deal as conditions it imposed rather than a concession it accepted.
Iran Foreign Ministry / Araghchi
Iran Foreign Ministry / Araghchi
Araghchi's dilute-in-Iran red line was met by the US concession, but his foreign ministry spokesman said Tehran had not taken a final decision and a signing might come in days, not Sunday. Araghchi separately wrote to the IAEA pledging to protect nuclear materials as dilution negotiations advanced.
White House / US negotiating team
White House / US negotiating team
Washington accepted dilution inside Iran rather than ship-out, its first substantive material concession in 106 days, the New York Times reported. With the White House register blank and the ceremony slipped a third weekend, the administration has moved its negotiating position without yet producing a document.