MISSION BRIEF
Intercepted by: {{publication_name}}
At 0545 GMT on Thursday, the Honduras-flagged Hui Chuan — a floating armory anchored 38 nautical miles northeast of Fujairah, carrying weapons stored for hire by merchant vessels defending themselves in the strait — was boarded by personnel the UK Maritime Trade Operations center described only as "unauthorized," and the vessel was last plotted sailing into Iranian territorial waters before its transponder went dark. This happened as Trump sat across from Xi in Beijing, both men issuing a joint statement that the Strait of Hormuz "must be open for the free flow of energy." Iran wasn't listening to the statement. Iran was running a parallel operation.
The same morning, semiofficial Iranian news agency Fars confirmed that Tehran had begun allowing a select number of Chinese vessels to transit the strait — bulk carriers, cargo ships, service vessels — following direct intervention by Beijing's foreign minister and ambassador to Iran, routed through the framework of the China-Iran strategic partnership. A Chinese VLCC carrying 2 million barrels of Iraqi crude had already made the run on Wednesday, the first supertanker through the chokepoint in weeks, with MarineTraffic data confirming the transit. The price of passage for that privilege was not disclosed. The price for everyone else remained what it has been since late March: up to $2 million per vessel, paid to the Persian Gulf Strait Authority — a government agency Tehran stood up in early May to formalize what was already happening.
Two ships were seized. One armory boarded. Thirty Chinese vessels waved through. The IEA reported Thursday that Hormuz flows had dropped by nearly 6 million barrels per day in the first quarter of 2026 — the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market, by the agency's own description. Saudi Aramco's CEO said this week that the market has already lost more than 1 billion barrels of supply since the strait closed in early March, and that if the blockade persists past mid-June, normalization will not come before 2027.
The Persian Gulf Strait Authority is not a regulatory body. It is a toll booth operated by the IRGC, accepting payment in Chinese yuan routed through Kunlun Bank via CIPS — outside SWIFT — and in cryptocurrency. Iran's parliament codified the system on March 30. The US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control issued guidance in April warning that payments to the PGSA could expose non-US firms to secondary sanctions. Some ships have paid anyway. Lloyd's List confirmed at least two documented payments as of early April; the fees run approximately $0.50–$1.00 per barrel of cargo, meaning a fully loaded VLCC pays roughly $2 million per crossing. Iran is building a permanent revenue stream from a chokepoint it does not legally own.
The ceasefire that took effect April 8 has been, in Trump's own words this week, on "massive life support." Iran scrapped the original reopening agreement after Trump declared the US naval blockade would remain in place regardless. Both sides now run simultaneous blockades — Iran vetting inbound traffic, the US intercepting ships attempting to reach Iranian ports, with CENTCOM reporting it has redirected 72 commercial vessels since the mission began. Two separate sovereigns. One 22-mile channel. And a floating armory heading the wrong direction this morning.
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THE OPERATION
Two parallel regimes
Tehran's move is a five-tier tiered access system — nations ranked by diplomatic alignment, with "friendlier" states paying lower fees and vessels linked to the US or Israel denied transit entirely. Chinese ships get the first-class lane. Russian and Indian flagged vessels negotiate rates. Everyone else submits ownership records, crew manifests, cargo declarations, AIS tracking data, and insurance documentation to the PGSA before a payment amount is determined, a patrol boat arrives, and the ship is escorted — through Iranian territorial waters, not the center of the strait — to the other side. The routing through Iranian waters is not incidental. It is the point: Iran is making the transit visible as proof of control.
The payment architecture is engineered to survive any sanctions configuration the US can construct. Yuan flows through Kunlun Bank — one of the few Chinese institutions still clearing Iranian transactions — on CIPS rails that do not touch the SWIFT network. Crypto provides a second channel. Iran's parliament specifically authorized "digital currencies developed with participation of Iranian companies" in the Hormuz Management Plan passed March 30. The US Treasury moved to close the yuan route in late April with fresh sanctions on entities involved in Iranian oil sales to China. Those sanctions were announced the same week Trump was in Beijing asking Xi to pressure Iran to reopen the strait.
China blocked a UN Security Council resolution in early April — alongside Russia — that would have protected commercial shipping in the strait. Beijing said the resolution was biased against Iran.
Then on Thursday, Iran let through a Chinese supertanker carrying 2 million barrels. China's foreign minister and ambassador had personally requested it. The White House summary of the Trump-Xi summit said Xi opposed Iran's toll system. China's summary of the same meeting did not mention it.
Windward's maritime intelligence platform flagged a broader pattern Thursday: the seizure of the Hui Chuan off Fujairah is consistent with escalating "coercive maritime activity" in the Gulf of Oman — a zone that sits just outside the strait itself, where vessels have been staging while waiting for clearance. Iran captured another vessel, the Ocean Koi, in the same zone last week. The IRGC's Iranian judiciary spokesperson said on Thursday that such seizures are carried out under domestic court orders. The Institute for the Study of War assessed this week that attacking and capturing cargo vessels has become a durable instrument of Iranian strategy regardless of whether the ceasefire holds or collapses. The takings are not retaliation. They are leverage.
Before the war, 70 vessels transited Hormuz daily. Saudi Aramco's CEO said this week that 2 to 5 ships are making the run now. The market has already absorbed more than 880 million net barrels of supply loss. The world uses roughly 100 million barrels a day. Iran is losing 100 million barrels of supply from global markets for every week the strait stays closed — and has built a payment system that means partial reopening generates revenue for the IRGC while maintaining the leverage. Open enough to collect tolls. Closed enough to keep the price of crude at $106 a barrel.
RULES OF ENGAGEMENT
Your exposure
WTI crude closed Thursday at $102.45 and opened Friday at $104.81 — up 65% from this time last year, when it was trading below $55. Brent is at $109.03 this morning. The AAA national average for a gallon of regular gas was $4.534 on Wednesday — up $1.40 from a year ago — and has risen 25 cents in each of the two previous consecutive weeks as oil above $100 bleeds into retail fuel prices. Consumer prices rose 3.8% in April year-over-year, the biggest annual increase in nearly three years, with energy accounting for 40% of that jump. Wholesale prices — what businesses pay before they pass costs to you — ran 6.0% in April.
Kevin Warsh was confirmed as Fed chair on Wednesday in a 54-45 vote, the closest confirmation in the modern era. He takes over a central bank where three committee members have already signaled the next rate move could be a hike, not a cut — the odds of a December rate increase are priced at 30% by CME FedWatch. The market Warsh inherits has the 30-year mortgage above 5%, the S&P 500 at record highs on AI euphoria, and a PPI that suggests producers haven't finished passing their energy costs down the chain. The IEA warned Thursday that the global oil market will remain materially undersupplied through October even if the conflict ends next month — and there is no indication the conflict is ending next month.
Saudi Arabia told OPEC this week that its production has fallen to the lowest level since 1990. More than 600 ships remain stranded inside the Persian Gulf, unable to move. Another 240 are staged outside Hormuz, waiting for a clearance that either never comes or costs $2 million paid to a sanctioned paramilitary organization in yuan or crypto.
Iran has turned the world's most critical energy chokepoint into a toll road it does not legally own, collecting up to $2 million per crossing in currency that bypasses every sanction the US Treasury can impose — and the $4.53 you paid for a gallon of gas this week is, in part, a fee collected by the IRGC on oil that was supposed to move freely through international waters. The Fed chair who just inherited this problem cannot cut rates into a 6% PPI. And the guy on television called it geopolitical uncertainty.
