Donald Trump launched a sweeping US military escort mission in the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, calling it “Project Freedom.” Iran fired back with a direct threat: any American forces that approach or enter the waterway will be attacked.
The standoff intensified almost immediately after Trump’s announcement. According to NBC News, Ali Abdollahi, head of Iran’s military unified command, issued a blunt warning in a statement carried by state media. “We warn that any foreign armed forces, especially the aggressive US army, will be attacked if they intend to approach and enter the Strait of Hormuz,” Abdollahi said.
Trump announced the mission the day before on his Truth Social platform, framing it as a humanitarian effort. “For the good of Iran, the Middle East, and the United States, we have told these Countries that we will guide their Ships safely out of these restricted Waterways, so that they can freely and ably get on with their business,” he wrote. He described the countries whose ships are stranded as “neutral and innocent bystanders” and called Project Freedom a “humanitarian gesture,” warning that any interference would “have to be dealt with forcefully.”
What Project Freedom actually involves
US Central Command said the mission involves guided-missile destroyers, more than 100 land- and sea-based aircraft, unmanned platforms, and roughly 15,000 service members. However, according to two senior US officials cited by the Wall Street Journal, Navy warships will not directly escort commercial vessels through the strait at this stage. Officials told Axios that the Navy’s role is closer to a coordination effort, giving commercial ships information on navigating around Iranian mines rather than physically accompanying them.
By Monday afternoon, CENTCOM said two US-flagged merchant vessels had successfully transited the strait as “a first step” in the mission. US guided-missile destroyers also transited the waterway, CENTCOM confirmed.
Iran’s response on the ground
The situation escalated quickly. Iranian state media claimed its navy blocked a US warship from entering the strait, and semi-official Fars News Agency reported that two missiles struck the vessel near Jask. CENTCOM flatly rejected both claims. “No U.S. Navy ships have been struck. U.S. forces are supporting Project Freedom and enforcing the naval blockade on Iranian ports,” Central Command said in a post on X.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard spokesman Hossein Mohebbi separately warned that commercial ships moving in ways inconsistent with Tehran’s “declared principles” would face serious risks and could be “forcibly stopped.”
Ebrahim Azizi, head of Iran’s National Security Commission, took it further, saying on X that any US escort effort amounts to a ceasefire violation. “The Strait of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf would not be managed by Trump’s delusional posts,” he wrote.
Why this matters for global shipping
The stakes are enormous. The International Maritime Organization estimates up to 20,000 seafarers are stranded on roughly 2,000 vessels in the Gulf region, including oil tankers, cargo ships, and cruise liners. At least 19 attacks on vessels have been recorded since the conflict began, killing 10 crew members and injuring eight. The strait normally handles about a fifth of the world’s oil shipments, and its effective closure since late February has sent energy prices surging worldwide.
On Monday, the UK Maritime Trade Operations agency said the threat level in the strait remains “critical” and advised ships to consider routing through Oman’s territorial waters. Earlier in the day, a tanker near the UAE port of Fujairah was struck by unknown projectiles, though all crew were reported safe.
The mission draws comparisons to Operation Earnest Will in the 1980s, when the US escorted reflagged Kuwaiti tankers during the Iran-Iraq Tanker War. But analysts say today’s situation is far more complicated. Iran now has advanced drones, cruise missiles, and sophisticated surveillance tools that did not exist during that conflict. One analyst told Al Jazeera that the US has only about a dozen Navy vessels capable of defending shipping, while more than 100 ships transited the strait daily before the war.
This escalation comes amid a broader diplomatic standoff. As previously reported, Trump had backed away from a bombing threat against Iran earlier this year and ordered a mass troop repositioning following strained relations with Germany over the conflict. Washington has been reviewing a 14-point Iranian proposal conveyed through Pakistan, The National News reported, with no deal yet in sight.











