# maritime%20security
Latest news and articles about maritime%20security
Total: 69 articles found

U.S. Pledge to Escort Tankers in Strait of Hormuz Rings Hollow as Navy Refuses Over Risk
President Trump vowed U.S. naval escorts for tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, but U.S. commanders have declined repeated escort requests from commercial vessels, citing a high risk of Iranian attack. The disconnect has left hundreds of ships idled, raised the prospect of sustained disruption to global oil flows, and exposed weaknesses in deterrence and messaging.

Attack on Thai Freighter in Strait of Hormuz Raises Fresh Alarms for Global Shipping
A Thai cargo ship was attacked and set aflame in the Strait of Hormuz on 11 March; 20 crew were rescued and taken to Oman. The incident underscores continuing maritime security risks at a key oil transit chokepoint and could drive higher insurance costs, rerouting and calls for enhanced naval protection.

Merchant Ships Masquerade as Chinese to Slip Through Strait of Hormuz as Tensions Rise
In response to heightened US–Iran–Israel hostilities, about 30 commercial vessels have altered AIS data to present themselves as Chinese, or otherwise hide their identities, while transiting the Strait of Hormuz. The manoeuvre reflects acute concern for safety but deepens risks to neutral shipping, complicates naval responses and threatens further disruption to global energy markets.

Beijing Summons Maersk and MSC as Maritime Tensions Disrupt Global Trade
China’s Ministry of Transport summoned executives from Maersk and MSC on March 9 to discuss their shipping operations amid disruptions in the Persian Gulf and other volatile corridors. The meeting signalled Beijing’s intent to hold major carriers accountable for decisions that affect Chinese trade flows and highlights how geopolitical risk is becoming entangled with commercial logistics.

Iran Says U.S. Strike on Frigate Killed 104 Sailors, Raising Risk of Wider Indian Ocean Escalation
Iran has accused U.S. forces of striking the frigate Dena on March 4, claiming 104 sailors were killed and 32 wounded while the ship transited south of Sri Lanka after an India-led exercise. There is no independent public verification of the attack, but if confirmed the incident would risk significant regional escalation and disruption to Indian Ocean security and commercial shipping.

U.S. Presses Sri Lanka to Keep Iranian Sailors Ashore After U.S. Submarine Sinks Frigate
The U.S. urged Sri Lanka not to return Iranian naval personnel rescued after a U.S. submarine sank the Iranian frigate Dena, citing concerns Tehran would exploit the sailors for anti-American publicity. Sri Lanka allowed the logistics ship Bushehr to dock and moved crew to Colombo, but has not announced whether it will repatriate the survivors, leaving the island to balance humanitarian obligations, sovereignty and external pressure.

From Total Blockade to Precision Strikes: How Iran’s Strait of Hormuz Tactics Threaten a Fresh Oil Shock
Iran’s recent toggling between closing the Strait of Hormuz and targeting only Western-linked vessels has injected fresh volatility into oil markets, driving weekly price jumps and heightening geopolitical risk. Tehran’s calibrated strikes aim to pressure the United States and its allies while limiting damage to Iran’s own oil revenue, but the situation leaves global consumers and Asian importers dangerously exposed.

Iran’s Deputy FM Vows to Fight “to the Last Bullet,” Raising Regional Stakes
Iran’s deputy foreign minister said Tehran would fight “to the last bullet,” a forceful statement that intensifies regional tensions. The rhetoric raises risks of proxy escalation, complicates diplomacy, and could have economic knock-on effects on oil and shipping routes.

Sri Lanka Moves to Aid Iranian Warship as Naval Tensions Spike in Indian Ocean
Sri Lanka has begun evacuating 208 personnel from the Iranian replenishment ship Bushehr and will move the vessel to Trincomalee, President Dissanayake said. The move follows the sinking on March 4 of another Iranian warship, the Dena, near Sri Lankan waters—a development that has heightened tensions in the Indian Ocean and posed difficult diplomatic choices for Colombo.

Sri Lanka Evacuates 208 from Iranian Replenishment Ship, Moves Vessel to Trincomalee After Deadly Strike
Sri Lanka has agreed to assist the Iranian replenishment ship Bushehr, evacuating 208 personnel and moving the vessel to Trincomalee after a sister ship, the Dena, was sunk nearby in an incident Iran attributes to the United States. Colombo frames its action as humanitarian and consistent with maritime law, but the episode highlights growing naval tensions and diplomatic pressure in the Indian Ocean.

U.S. Submarine Sinks Iranian Warship in the Indian Ocean — A Strategic Shock and a Political Test for New Delhi
A U.S. submarine torpedoed and sank the Iranian warship Iris Dena in international waters of the Indian Ocean after the vessel had taken part in India's Milan 2026 exercises. The attack, which killed dozens and rescued some survivors, has intensified debate over the legality of U.S. actions, provoked anger in Tehran and domestic criticism in New Delhi for its silence, and signals a dangerous widening of the conflict beyond the Middle East.

Iran Claims Missile Strike on U.S. Destroyer with New Kader‑380 Weapon — A Potential Escalation in the Indian Ocean
Iran’s IRGC announced it struck a U.S. destroyer with Kader‑380 and other missiles during a refuelling operation roughly 600 km from Iran’s coast, claiming fires aboard both the warship and a tanker. Independent verification is lacking; regardless, the claim marks a sharp escalation with implications for naval operations, regional stability and global shipping.