CENTCOM announced on Monday 27 April that US forces have now turned around or returned to port 38 vessels under the blockade 1. The cumulative count was 33 at Friday's close on 25 April , the second day held flat; the five interdictions logged between Friday 25 and Monday 27 April mark the fastest two-day escalation since the campaign began on 13 April. CENTCOM is the United States Central Command, the combatant command responsible for naval operations in The Gulf and Arabian Sea.
The 37th vessel, the LPG tanker SEVAN (IMO 9177806), was taken on Saturday 25 April in the Arabian Sea, not the strait 2. The seizure took US enforcement out of the Strait of Hormuz for the first time since the 13 April blockade began. Windward's maritime intelligence reporting placed the SEVAN well east of the chokepoint; ships routing wide of the 33-kilometre strait now no longer escape it. The state-linked Tasnim agency carried the IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) line on 27 April: "Controlling the strait of Hormuz and maintaining the shadow of its deterrent effects over America is the definitive strategy of Islamic Iran."
The geographic widening matters because the legal architecture being drafted at Northwood by 30 European and Asian planners assumes a strait operation under UNCLOS transit-passage doctrine. The SEVAN seizure puts US enforcement outside that frame. Oman's territorial waters cover the strait's southern flank only; everything beyond is high seas, where the question of which flag-state's law applies becomes thornier. The IRGC's 24 April end-of-self-restraint declaration and the carrier concentration of three groups in theatre sit on either side of the same widening perimeter.
