Two US Navy guided-missile destroyers transited the Strait of Hormuz on 22 June 2026 to clear sea mines: the USS Frank E. Peterson and the USS Michael Murphy, with CENTCOM adding underwater drones to the effort 1. The mines had been laid by the IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Iran's parallel military), and CENTCOM (US Central Command, the Pentagon's Middle East command) ran the operation. A US-Iran deconfliction line was stood up in Geneva to run for the 60-day window, a working channel to avoid incidents at sea. This was The Administration doing something concrete, while Trump posted that the blockade could be "reset up again in about 15 minutes" 2.
The carriers had held station with no drawdown order even after the blockade formally ended . Mine-clearance is slow, physical work, and it sets the real timetable for whether the strait reopens, not a social-media post. A destroyer tasked to clearance is also doing escort and area-denial work, which signals Washington wants visible presence in the channel as much to deter the IRGC as to lift ordnance.
Vice President JD Vance put the standard plainly: "You can't trust anybody's words. You have to trust what they actually do" 3. Applied to his own administration, the line cuts both ways. The honest indicator is the warship on a weeks-long sweep, not the 15-minute reset Trump described.
