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Iran Conflict 2026
15MAR

CENTCOM redirections hit 58; four ships disabled

3 min read
04:55UTC

CENTCOM has now turned 58 commercial vessels away from Iranian ports since 13 April, six more in three days. The disabled-ship total stands at four, with two of them still unnamed.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Project Freedom is accelerating during the negotiation window, with no instrument tying the two timetables.

CENTCOM (United States Central Command, the combatant command for the Middle East) has redirected 58 commercial vessels from Iranian ports since 13 April, Al Jazeera reported on Sunday 10 May, citing the command's own statement 1. That is six further redirections in three days; the figure stood at 52 on 7 May . Four ships have been disabled in total since the Project Freedom operation opened , , up from two named in the F/A-18 smokestack-bombing run on M/T Sea Star III and M/T Sevda on 8 May . Two of the disabled vessels remain unnamed, despite a month of public CENTCOM statements naming the operational pattern.

Disabled means engines damaged or steering knocked out, not sunk; the hulls drift or limp to anchor. The standard CENTCOM technique uses precision strikes on the smokestack and rudder housings to immobilise without setting fuel oil on fire. The two unnamed actions raise the question of which flag states are quietly absorbing the loss without protesting publicly. Liberian, Marshall Islands and Panamanian flags account for most Gulf-bound tonnage; reflagging delays of two to four weeks would be the most visible second-order effect for the rest of the supply chain.

The pace matters because it falsifies the public-diplomacy framing. The verbal track between the two governments describes a negotiation moving towards a reply; the kinetic track shows CENTCOM accelerating, not pausing, while that reply is supposedly being drafted. Six redirections in three days is roughly twice the cadence of the first three weeks of the operation, when the average ran at one to two per day. For Asian refiners that translates to two-to-four-week delivery delays on diverted crude and condensate cargoes; for European buyers it means bidding up Atlantic-basin barrels to backfill.

The operational signal is that CENTCOM has standing authority to widen Project Freedom independent of the diplomatic timetable. The Pentagon decides cadence; the State Department runs the talks; the White House signs nothing tying the two together. That structural separation between the operational and political tracks is the same pattern Treasury exploited with Friday's CGSTL designation. Different US institutions are running their own Iran policy at their own pace, with no coordinator named to synchronise them.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

CENTCOM is the US military command responsible for the Middle East. Since 13 April it has been stopping commercial ships from reaching Iranian ports, turning them away or, in four cases, actually damaging them so they cannot proceed. By 10 May that count had reached 58 redirected vessels and four disabled ships. Disabling a ship means firing weapons to knock out its engines or steering so it cannot move under its own power, as happened to two tankers on 8 May when a US aircraft fired munitions down their exhaust stacks. The two additional unnamed disabled vessels add to that total. Each disabled ship is effectively taken out of service for weeks, and insurance costs for any ship trying to transit the area keep rising.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

CENTCOM's redirection mandate requires it to turn away vessels heading to Iranian ports regardless of whether the vessel is Iranian-flagged. The 58-vessel count includes third-country commercial ships whose cargoes have nothing to do with Iranian crude, a scope that exceeds the narrower interdiction logic of the original blockade announcement.

Separate from redirections, the four disabled ships represent a different instrument category: redirections compel cooperation; disabling removes the choice. CENTCOM used disabling for the first time on 7 May with the rudder strike and escalated to smokestack-targeting on 8 May. The two unnamed additional disabled vessels suggest that disabling actions are now running ahead of public attribution, a pattern consistent with CENTCOM managing escalation optics while expanding operational reach.

The unnamed vessels also create a verification gap that matters for any ceasefire: a credible ceasefire requires both sides to account for all actions taken. Two unacknowledged disabled ships complicate that accounting before talks have even produced a draft.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Six redirections in three days during the MOU negotiation window signals the blockade widening even as both sides describe the talks as live. The rate increase contradicts any reading of the MOU dialogue as a de-escalatory pause.

  • Risk

    Two unnamed disabled vessels suggest CENTCOM is conducting disabling actions it has not yet publicly acknowledged, creating a gap between operational reality and official communications that complicates third-party verification of any ceasefire.

First Reported In

Update #93 · Tanker hits Doha while Qatar mediates

Al Jazeera· 10 May 2026
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Different Perspectives
IAEA
IAEA
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Hengaw (Kurdish rights monitor)
Hengaw (Kurdish rights monitor)
Hengaw documented three judicial executions and the detention of Kurdish writer Majid Karimi in Tehran on 19 May, establishing Khorasan Razavi province as the newest geography in Iran's wartime judicial record. The organisation's Norway-based operation continues to surface a domestic repression track running in parallel with every diplomatic and military development.
India
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Pakistan
Pakistan
Pakistan is the only functioning diplomatic bridge between Tehran and Washington. Its role is relay, not mediation in the settlement sense: it conveyed Iran's 10-point counter-MOU in early May, relayed the US rejection, and is now passing 'corrective points' in the third documented exchange of this sub-cycle without either side working from a shared text.
UK and France (Northwood coalition)
UK and France (Northwood coalition)
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Saudi Arabia
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