Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi declared from Baghdad on 28 June, the same day Iran struck Kuwait and Bahrain, that Iran would hold "sole oversight and management" of the Strait of Hormuz for 30 days 1. A day later Washington said commercial traffic could pass the strait unhindered. On 30 June Iran demanded a single corridor along its own coastline and threatened to obstruct ships using any other route 2.
Both sides cite the same text. Article 5 of the 16 June MoU (Memorandum of Understanding) promises safe passage at no charge for 60 days and mine clearance inside the same window Iran now claims to police; Iran reads that as its right to run the strait during the clearance period, and Washington reads it as a guarantee of open routing 3. Every routing decision now breaks the agreement by one reading or the other, which keeps insurers' war-risk cover suspended and tankers waiting.
The IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) had already rejected the Oman-coordinated southern lane ; the tankers Ever Lovely and Kiku were struck while using exactly that route, not an Iranian corridor 4. Iran and Oman set up a bilateral fee committee for the strait on 23 June , yet the corridor stays contested, which is why the ceasefire keeps breaking on the water.
