MISSION BRIEF
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Four very large crude carriers — Alicia, RHN, Star Forest, and Aqua — are broadcasting fake position data right now, their AIS transponders locked on anchorages off Basrah, Iraq, while the hulls themselves are pulling alongside Kharg Island loading Iranian crude. Windward AI flagged the cluster on April 29. Each VLCC holds roughly 2 million barrels. All four together: 8 million barrels, $800 million at current prices, sailing under fraudulent registries from Curacao and Malawi — landlocked Malawi, flagging oil tankers — and heading for a ship-to-ship transfer zone off Singapore that the US government calls the EOPL, Eastern Outside Port Limits, which is a polite way of saying: the lawless floating exchange where Iran's oil changes hands before anyone in Beijing has to sign for it.
This is not new. It is larger. UANI tracked 250 ship-to-ship transfers at the EOPL between January and April 21 alone — and that count ended the day US forces seized the MT Tifani in the Indian Ocean, a 2-million-barrel VLCC that had been running the Kharg-to-EOPL route since at least April 2025, going dark off Singapore, reappearing in the Gulf of Oman, making the turn toward Shandong, cutting its AIS again near Sri Lanka before the Navy intercepted it mid-course-change. The satellite imagery that let CNN place it at Kharg on April 6 came from a commercial feed. The vessel had its transponder off. The hull was still visible from 400 miles up.
Six thousand miles west, in the Qingdao Huangdao port area on the Yellow Sea, a crude oil terminal called Qingdao Haiye Oil Terminal Co., Ltd. received dozens of those shipments in 2025 alone — tens of millions of barrels, by the State Department's own designation, issued May 1. Beijing's instruction to its refiners on the matter of US sanctions has been consistent and three words long: keep buying anyway.
The mechanism is a digital alibi. A VLCC in international waters broadcasts a fake AIS signal anchored in Iraqi territory — "legitimate" Iraqi port traffic, no flags raised, no interdiction risk — while the physical vessel loads sanctioned cargo in Iranian waters. Once loaded, the AIS comes back on showing an Iraqi origin. The oil enters China's Shandong teapot refinery system labeled as Iraqi crude. The paper says Iraq. The barrel says Kharg Island. No compliance desk on earth catches that gap without satellite imagery and multi-source vessel intelligence cross-referenced in real time — which is exactly what Windward AI was built to do, and exactly what most banks and insurers are not doing.
Ten sanctioned tankers are running this scheme simultaneously, according to Windward's April 29 report — not four, ten — including the handysize Paola, the LR1 Adena, three medium-range tankers, and the LPG carrier Royal H, newly sanctioned in February. The US blockade on Iranian ports started April 13. It has cut Iranian oil loadings by more than half. But half of something that was generating $115 million per day before the war started is still $57 million a day, and the barrels that do get through are selling at $100-plus Brent, not the $75 Brent of pre-war pricing.
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THE OPERATION
Two parallel pipelines
The physical pipeline runs Kharg Island to EOPL to Shandong. The ships go dark at Kharg, run clean AIS across the Indian Ocean, cut the signal again in the Singapore Strait, conduct the ship-to-ship transfer in international waters off Malaysia's east coast — often at night, often between vessels that will both deny the meeting happened — and the receiving ship, clean-flagged and undesignated, picks up the cargo and enters Qingdao Huangdao as normal commercial traffic. The Macho Queen, sanctioned by the US after UANI satellite imagery caught it mid-transfer with the MT Tifani off Malaysia in August 2025, briefly turned its AIS back on after the exchange — long enough to show it heading northeast toward China — then cut the signal again once the sanction came down. The cargo arrived anyway.
The financial pipeline is harder to see and harder to stop. Treasury sanctioned three Iranian foreign currency exchange houses on May 1 under "Economic Fury" — unnamed in the State Department's public release, which is itself an intelligence tell, because naming them would show how far the network reaches. These exchange houses convert oil revenue into usable currency outside the SWIFT system, routing it through front companies across multiple jurisdictions. Iran has been doing this since 1979. The current network has had forty-seven years of continuous refinement. Treasury Secretary Bessent called Iran "the head of the snake." He sanctioned a terminal in Qingdao that has already accepted the deliveries. The snake already ate.
Here is what the blockade numbers actually show.
Before the war, Iran moved 1.1 to 1.9 million barrels per day at roughly $75 Brent. After the blockade cut exports by more than half, Iran moved roughly 550,000 to 950,000 barrels per day — at Brent north of $100. At peak, according to Bloomberg's calculations cited by OilPrice.com and sourced from TankerTrackers.com and Kpler data, Iran's wartime oil revenue hit $115 million per day in February. That figure was rising through March as Brent climbed toward $126. The regime that Washington is trying to strangle financially is, by some measures, generating more hard-currency oil revenue per barrel today than it was before the first bomb dropped.
According to Al Jazeera's April 30 vessel tracking investigation, 26 ships from Iran's shadow fleet successfully bypassed the US naval blockade between April 13 and late April. The shadow fleet — an estimated 200-plus vessels built over decades of sanctions, insured through networks like Maritime Mutual (which Global Fishing Watch identified as covering one in six dark fleet tankers, with 130 of its 231 Iran-linked vessels confirmed carrying sanctioned cargo) — is not a workaround Iran built during this war. It is the infrastructure of an adversary that planned for exactly this scenario. The US is running an open blockade. Iran is running a covert one.
Washington sanctioned Qingdao Haiye. Last year it sanctioned Qingdao Port Haiye Dongjiakou Oil Products Co. — a different terminal, same port cluster, same Shandong province, same teapot refinery ecosystem. The second designation came down two weeks before Trump's scheduled visit to Beijing. China's refiners have not stopped buying.
RULES OF ENGAGEMENT
Your exposure
The US blockade is working in the sense that Iranian loadings are down. It is not working in the sense that the oil is still moving, the revenue is still flowing, and the infrastructure running the evasion — the dark fleet, the shell companies, the exchange houses, the Chinese terminals — has not been dismantled, only named. Naming a sanctioned entity and stopping it are different operations. The sanctions list is public. The oil is not.
Every barrel that escapes through the EOPL-to-Shandong route tightens the global supply picture in a specific way: it keeps Iranian crude off the public ledger, keeps global inventory data understated, and keeps the market guessing how much oil is actually available. Brent at $114 per barrel is a price that reflects visible supply — the barrels that show up in EIA weekly reports, LME warehouse data, tanker tracking that hasn't gone dark. The barrels moving through the EOPL don't show up there. The market is priced on incomplete information, which means the premium for uncertainty is structurally embedded in what you pay at the pump every time the blockade holds another week.
The US national average for regular gasoline hit $4.45 per gallon on Monday, according to AAA — up from $2.98 the day before the war started on February 28. That $1.47 increase is not oil scarcity. It is sanctions evasion that's working just well enough to keep Iran in the fight, priced into every gallon you bought this week.
The blockade has cut Iranian exports by more than half and cut Iranian daily revenue to perhaps $57 million — while simultaneously driving Brent above $100, which means the barrels Iran still exports are worth 35% more than they were before the war started, and every sanctioned tanker that makes the EOPL run deposits another $200 million into IRGC-linked accounts while the West burns through SPR reserves it will take four years to rebuild and Americans pay $4.45 to fill the tank of a country that has been running this exact operation since before most of its naval officers were born.

