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Iran Conflict 2026
19APR

Windward data dismantles Cooper's halt claim

4 min read
11:05UTC

Windward maritime intelligence logged 117 dark fleet vessels in the Gulf and 15 Hormuz transits on 15 April, with 153.7 million barrels of Iranian crude on water; three independent datasets contradict CENTCOM's '100 per cent halt' claim.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Vessels dodging American enforcement are routing straight into Iran's declared mine zone.

Windward's maritime intelligence log for 15 April records 117 dark fleet vessels in the Gulf, 15 ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz that day, and 153.7 million barrels of Iranian crude on water, 84.9 per cent of it China-bound. The National and LSEG independently corroborate the pattern. CENTCOM Commander Admiral Brad Cooper had claimed the same day that US forces had "completely halted economic trade going into and out of Iran by sea" . His "100 per cent" figure now has three datasets against it, and a 38-day satellite blackout removing the only public dataset that could arbitrate a tie.

The gap is explained structurally, not rhetorically. CENTCOM's written order covers Iranian-port traffic only; it does not incorporate the toll-interdiction provision Trump posted to Truth Social, which means vessels routing to non-Iranian ports fall outside the written rules , . Chinese-owned tankers including the Rich Starry and Elpis crossed under that carve-out on day one of the blockade . Windward's synthetic-aperture radar picked out 11 of 19 large vessels near Larak Island on 15 April, confirming the carve-out is active in volume, not symbolic.

The corridor those vessels are using is the Larak-Qeshm channel, the same geographic zone IRGC-linked media published a mine danger chart for on 9 April. Which means commercial ships evading American enforcement are now routing through waters Iran has declared mined. Both blockades operate in the same strait, in different ways. Neither has a signed presidential instrument behind it; both depend on written orders and public posts that have produced incompatible rules of operation for the same vessels.

The press-attribution problem for CENTCOM is not minor. A commander's "100 per cent halt" line is the kind of statement that gets read straight into congressional testimony, Treasury sanctions logic and allied naval planning. Three contradicting datasets make it unsustainable as a factual claim; 84.9 per cent China-bound quantifies Beijing's stake in keeping the carve-out alive. The structural question next fortnight is whether a single mine incident at Larak-Qeshm, which sits well inside credible risk, collapses the carve-out overnight and produces the first mass casualty of a blockade no one has signed.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US military claimed it has stopped Iran's oil trade completely. Independent shipping trackers found that 117 tankers were in the Gulf on 15 April with their tracking systems switched off , which is exactly how ships evade the US monitoring that CENTCOM used to make its claim. Most of the oil is heading to China. The route the tankers are using runs near an island where Iran published a warning about sea mines last week, creating a legally treacherous situation for the US if it tries to intercept them there.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

CENTCOM's '100 per cent halt' claim relies on AIS-based traffic monitoring supplemented by overhead imagery at declared interdiction points. The methodological gap is that dark-fleet vessels by definition disable their AIS transponders, and 38 days of satellite surveillance disruption means overhead imagery coverage is degraded.

The 117 dark-fleet count comes from Windward's synthetic-aperture radar (SAR), which detects vessel hulls regardless of AIS status , the only methodology that can see what CENTCOM cannot.

The Larak-Qeshm corridor is significant because the IRGC published a mine danger chart for that corridor on 9 April. This creates a strategic ambiguity: vessels routing through Larak-Qeshm may be evading US interdiction, or may be deliberately transiting a claimed mine area to create liability for the US if it conducts interdiction operations there.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The three-dataset contradiction of CENTCOM's halt claim will be cited by congressional sceptics at the next WPR vote as evidence that the military campaign's stated objectives are not being achieved.

  • Risk

    US interdiction operations in the Larak-Qeshm corridor , where Iran has published a mine-danger chart , create legal and operational exposure if a US vessel triggers an Iranian mine while conducting what CENTCOM classifies as freedom-of-navigation enforcement.

First Reported In

Update #71 · Netanyahu learned from the media

CBS News· 17 Apr 2026
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