The operational follow-on to the Paris conference lands at Northwood, the UK Permanent Joint Headquarters, in the week of 20 April. British and French planners will draft rules of engagement for the 40-nation Hormuz mission agreed in posture form. The Pentagon is not in the planning room. CENTCOM, which runs the parallel US blockade that the European mission cannot operate alongside until hostilities end, will not be on the drafting list.
That is a structural choice, not a scheduling accident. Rules of engagement written at Northwood by UK and French officers will reflect European legal preferences: transit-passage rights under UNCLOS, proportionality rules drawn from NATO maritime doctrine, insurance-industry exposure modelled on P&I club templates. The template extends the legal spine the EU laid down under UNCLOS transit-passage doctrine . Any subsequent US arrangement either reaches into that framework or argues round it. In international maritime law, first credible text holds longer than any party's preference to revise it.
The Pentagon's absence has two plausible readings. One is that Washington is conserving discretion for a future unilateral framework it has not yet drafted. The other is that Washington has no multilateral text in the field because the process that would produce one, interagency coordination under a named Iran policy, has not convened. The working-method pattern across the past 48 days favours the second reading . Northwood is stepping into a policy vacuum the US could have filled and has not.
What emerges from Northwood will not be combat-ready on publication. The "when conditions are met" deployment trigger binds the mission to post-war reconstruction, not active conflict. But rules of engagement have a longer shelf life than the conditions that produce them. British and French officers drafting text this week are writing the operational template for how Hormuz is policed after the war ends. The GCC and Saudi Arabia will either sign on to that template or produce an alternative. CENTCOM will be briefed on whichever outcome arrives.
