U.S. Navy sinks Iranian boats and defeats missile-drone attacks in Strait of Hormuz, enabling safe transit of American merchant ships.
U.S. Navy sinks Iranian boats and defeats missile-drone attacks in Strait of Hormuz, enabling safe transit of American merchant ships.
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U.S. repels Iranian boats, missiles, and drones in Strait of Hormuz to enable Project Freedom ship transits

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The U.S. military sank six Iranian small boats and defeated cruise missile and drone attacks in the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, allowing two American-flagged merchant ships to complete a safe transit under President Trump's 'Project Freedom' initiative. Separate incidents included an explosion on a South Korean-operated vessel and Iranian missile and drone strikes on the UAE—the first since the early April ceasefire—with the UAE reporting interceptions and casualties.

U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) Commander Adm. Brad Cooper reported that U.S. forces engaged Iranian cruise missiles, drones, and small boats targeting U.S. Navy vessels and commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. Using Apache and Seahawk helicopters, the U.S. sank six small boats. "Each and every threat had been defeated," Cooper told reporters, describing Iran's actions as "initiating aggressive behavior." No U.S. or commercial ships were hit.

The operation supported "Project Freedom," aimed at restoring commerce through the strait, which Iran had closed since late February. CENTCOM posted on X that "2 U.S.-flagged merchant vessels have successfully transited through the Strait of Hormuz and are safely headed on their journey." U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyers operated in the Arabian Gulf in support. The U.S. opened a mine-free passage in Oman's waters, protected by destroyers, over 100 aircraft including F-35s and F/A-18s, unmanned platforms, and 15,000 service members. Separately, the U.S. enforces a 100% effective naval blockade on Iranian ports in the Gulf of Oman.

On the same day, around 8:40 p.m., an explosion and fire occurred in the port side engine room of a Panama-flagged bulker operated by South Korea's HMM, anchored near the UAE. The vessel had 24 crew members—six South Koreans and 18 foreigners—with no casualties. An HMM official said the cause was unclear, possibly malfunction or external attack. President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social: "Iran has taken some shots at unrelated Nations... including a South Korean Cargo Ship. Perhaps it's time for South Korea to come and join the mission! We've shot down seven small Boats... Other than the South Korean Ship, there has been, at this moment, no damage."

The British military reported two cargo vessels ablaze off the UAE coast.

The UAE Defense Ministry said it intercepted 15 missiles and four drones launched by Iran, with one drone causing a fire at an oil facility in Fujairah that wounded three Indian nationals. The UAE issued four missile alerts—the first since the ceasefire—and condemned the "renewed treacherous Iranian aggression."

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi warned on X that the U.S. and UAE "should be wary of being dragged back into quagmire." An anonymous Iranian military official told state television Tehran had "no plan" to target the UAE, blaming U.S. "military adventurism." Maj. Gen. Ali Abdollahi told IRIB that "any foreign military force—especially the aggressive U.S. military—that intends to approach or enter the Strait of Hormuz will be targeted."

Oil prices jumped 6% amid the tensions.

Was die Leute sagen

X discussions praise U.S. Navy for sinking Iranian boats and defeating attacks to enable Project Freedom ship transits in the Strait of Hormuz, portraying it as breaking Iran's blockade. Pro-Iran voices claim Tehran is enforcing control and retaliating against UAE and other ships. News outlets report conflicting claims, with concerns over escalation and oil price spikes.

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Illustration of U.S. strikes on Iranian mine-laying boats in the Strait of Hormuz amid Iran's closure claim and shipping attacks.
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Iran says it has closed the Strait of Hormuz as U.S. reports strikes on suspected minelayers amid rising shipping attacks

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Iran has claimed the Strait of Hormuz is closed after a surge of attacks on commercial vessels since late February, while the U.S. military says it destroyed Iranian mine-laying boats near the vital oil chokepoint—an escalation that has heightened fears of prolonged disruption to energy and trade flows.

In der Straße von Hormus wurden am Mittwoch mehrere Frachtschiffe von unbekannten Geschossen getroffen, während Spannungen im Iran-Krieg anhalten. Die britische Seehandelsaufsicht UKMTO meldete Evakuierungen und sichere Crews. Dies geschieht inmitten von Drohnenangriffen und Vergeltungsandrohungen Irans.

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Die iranischen Revolutionsgarden haben vor einer harten Reaktion auf jedes Militärschiff gewarnt, das die Straße von Hormus durchquert, nachdem zwei US-Zerstörer für eine Minenräumoperation hindurchgefahren waren. Die Drohung kommt zu einem Zeitpunkt, an dem Friedensgespräche zwischen den Vereinigten Staaten und dem Iran in Pakistan begonnen haben. Die Schifffahrt in dieser strategisch wichtigen Wasserstraße bleibt durch von Teheran gelegte Minen behindert.

In der anhaltenden Krise um die Straße von Hormus, die seit der iranischen Blockade im März nun in ihre vierte Woche geht, hat US-Präsident Donald Trump die Marine angewiesen, eine Gegenblockade zu errichten, nachdem die Friedensgespräche im pakistanischen Islamabad gescheitert sind. Die weltweiten Ölpreise stiegen auf 103 US-Dollar pro Barrel, was im Vorfeld einer wichtigen Preisüberprüfung in Kenia Befürchtungen vor Kraftstoffengpässen aufkommen ließ.

Von KI berichtet

U.S. Central Command announced that Iran has lost all 11 of its ships in the Gulf of Oman amid escalating strikes in Operation Epic Fury, following over 1,250 targets hit in 48 hours. This builds on earlier reports of naval losses and comes as Iranian counterstrikes intensify, killing six U.S. soldiers.

Nachdem der iranische Außenminister Abbas Araghchi erklärt hat, dass die Straße von Hormus „vollständig geöffnet“ sei, haben unter indischer Flagge fahrende Schiffe mit Rohöl, das für Indiens Energiebedarf von entscheidender Bedeutung ist, begonnen, den Persischen Golf zu verlassen. Dies markiert eine weitere Entspannung nach früheren selektiven Durchfahrten von Schiffen ohne US- oder israelische Verbindungen inmitten des anhaltenden Konflikts.

Von KI berichtet

An explosion and fire struck the South Korean-operated HMM Namu bulk carrier anchored off the UAE near the Strait of Hormuz late on May 4. U.S. President Donald Trump claimed Iran 'shot at' the vessel for going 'it alone' and urged Seoul to join the U.S.-led Project Freedom mission. South Korea's government prioritizes investigating the cause before responding.

 

 

 

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