The United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Japan, and Canada issued a joint statement on 19 March expressing "readiness to contribute to appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait" of Hormuz 1. The statement condemned Iran's mine-laying and called for an "immediate comprehensive moratorium on attacks on civilian infrastructure." It committed no forces, set no timeline, and named no specific contribution 2.
This is the third iteration of the Hormuz Coalition effort, and each round has produced less than the one before. On 14 March, Trump called on five countries to send warships . Within 72 hours, all five — Australia, Japan, the United Kingdom, Germany, and France — formally declined . Trump responded by questioning NATO's future . Now seven countries, two more than originally asked, have produced a statement whose operative verb is "readiness" — not deployment, not commitment, not planning. The language repays close reading. "Appropriate efforts" is unspecified. "Ensure safe passage" does not describe a military mission. France, Germany, Italy, and Japan had all previously declined to send warships; their signatures here change nothing operationally. Canada and the Netherlands are additions to the diplomatic roster but not to any order of battle.
The US Navy has described the Strait as an Iranian "Kill box" with more than 300 commercial ships stranded and daily transits in single digits against a historical average of 138 . Defence officials have said escorts cannot Begin until the threat of Iranian fire is substantially reduced. The United States is bearing this burden alone — at a cost the Pentagon now prices at $200 billion and rising — while the seven signatories contribute a joint communiqué. During the 1987–88 Tanker War, the last sustained threat to Gulf shipping, Operation Earnest Will required actual US warships to reflag and escort Kuwaiti tankers through the strait. That operation took months to assemble even with Cold War alliance discipline and direct Iraqi threats to allied shipping interests. The current diplomatic trajectory has not reached step one.
Defence Secretary Hegseth called European allies "ungrateful" hours before the statement's publication and said the world "should be saying one thing to President Trump: 'Thank you'" 3. The sequencing is instructive: the broadside landed first, the diplomatic response followed, and the two exist in different registers entirely. Hegseth's rhetoric presupposes a Coalition; the seven-nation statement confirms its absence in the politest terms available. For the Gulf States absorbing daily Iranian fire, and for the 300-plus ships waiting to transit, the distance between "readiness to contribute" and a destroyer on station is the distance that matters.
