Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
9APR

Iran writes Hormuz toll into statute

3 min read
11:02UTC
ConflictDeveloping

Iran's Islamic Consultative Assembly (the Majlis) is drafting legislation to formalise the strait of Hormuz toll as Iranian domestic law, with finalisation due next week, according to an unnamed lawmaker cited by Fars news agency. 1 The bill would codify what began as an IRGC field improvisation into statute, transforming a wartime military mechanism into a permanent legal claim over one of the world's critical waterways.

The significance of the timing cannot be overstated. IRGC Navy Commander Admiral Alireza Tangsiri, the man who personally built the toll and vetting system from scratch, was killed in an Israeli airstrike hours before this legislation was publicly confirmed. He was killed at 3am on Wednesday. By that afternoon, the Majlis legal committee in Tehran was drafting his toll system into permanent law. Twenty-six vessels have now transited under the IRGC vetting regime; operators submit IMO numbers, cargo manifests, and crew names to IRGC-connected intermediaries, receive a clearance code, and follow an approved route under escort past Larak Island. At least two paid in Chinese yuan. India continues to transit while denying it pays. 2

Iran's UN representative told the IMO this week that vessels linked to 'aggressor parties' have forfeited the right of innocent passage, the international law principle that merchant ships may transit straits freely. 3 Iran frames its vetting system not as a blockade but as legitimate self-defence, a framing designed to survive any post-ceasefire legal challenge.

The closest historical parallel is Egypt's 1957 Suez Canal nationalisation law, which survived the tripartite invasion and became the permanent legal basis for Egyptian canal authority. Iran appears to be following the same playbook: establish physical control during a crisis, then legislate before the crisis ends, so that any resolution begins from the new legal baseline rather than the pre-war status quo. The right of innocent passage existed for decades before this week. Iran told the IMO it no longer applies to hostile parties. If that position is codified in domestic law, every future negotiation over Hormuz will begin from the position that Iran holds a legal claim, not merely a physical one.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran is writing a law that says it can permanently charge ships to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, not just during the war. About 20% of the world's oil travels through this narrow waterway. If that law passes, every barrel of oil, every container of goods, and every tonne of grain that moves through the strait costs more, because a toll gets baked into the price. That cost eventually lands on consumers worldwide in fuel prices, heating bills, and food costs. The clever part, from Iran's perspective, is that a law is much harder to undo than a military order: bombing a toll booth is one thing, repealing another country's legislation is something else entirely.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran is not merely closing a strait but creating a domestic legal framework that will require treaty-level renegotiation, not just military pressure, to dismantle.

The Majlis drafting process converts a wartime military mechanism into permanent domestic statute. Once codified, reversal requires legislative repeal, not military defeat.

The underlying structural cause is Iran's three-sided physical control of the strait, which no military operation can alter without permanent occupation.

First Reported In

Update #49 · Hormuz toll into law; Tangsiri killed

Bloomberg· 27 Mar 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Civilians and prisoners inside Iran
Civilians and prisoners inside Iran
Mojtaba Kian was hanged in under 50 days from arrest, the fastest wartime espionage case in Hengaw's record, as Trump announced a peace deal. Amnesty places Iran's 2026 execution count above 200 at its fastest pace in 44 years; the diplomatic track has not altered the internal enforcement tempo.
China
China
Beijing accepted a Pakistani civilian briefing mission on the same day OFAC's GL V expired, keeping itself inside the deal architecture without being a named signatory. How Chinese banks respond to Monday's Hengli dollar-clearing decision is the first real-world test of whether the verbal MOU carries any institutional weight.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Islamabad split its highest-level delegation: army chief Munir to Tehran on the security track, Prime Minister Sharif and Foreign Minister Dar to Beijing before Monday's GL V-driven bank compliance decision. The architecture routes the deal's hardest problem, IRGC buy-in, through the general-officer channel that has extracted every wartime concession.
Israeli government
Israeli government
An unnamed Israeli official told the Times of Israel that Trump privately told Netanyahu the deal will dismantle Iran's nuclear programme and remove all its uranium, terms incompatible with what Tehran and a Reuters source describe. If Netanyahu believes he was promised full dismantlement and the deal delivers less, Israel holds a sabotage veto before any signature.
Iranian Foreign Ministry
Iranian Foreign Ministry
Spokesman Esmail Baghaei told state agency IRNA that nuclear issues are 'not in the current negotiations text' and the sequencing is: end the war first, then negotiate nuclear over two months. Baghaei's formulation preserves Khamenei's 21 May uranium-stay directive while letting the civilian diplomacy track continue.
Donald Trump / White House
Donald Trump / White House
Trump declared the Iran deal 'largely negotiated' on 23 May via Truth Social and signed nothing; the White House's only paper was a Memorial Day proclamation. The verbal-track method converts maximum political signalling into minimum legal exposure: no congressional notification, no Senate treaty ratification, no instrument for Iran to formally reject.