A phone call between Tehran and Doha over a Strait of Hormuz incident shows the waterway's partial reopening remains fragile, with 8,000 mariners still trapped.
A phone call between Tehran and Doha over a Strait of Hormuz incident shows the waterway's partial reopening remains fragile, with 8,000 mariners still trapped.

Iran and Qatar held a telephone discussion about an incident in the Strait of Hormuz, the latest sign that the waterway handling one-fifth of global oil trade remains a flashpoint even after a preliminary US-Iran peace deal.
"The Strait of Hormuz is not the playground of the aggressor America, but rather the territory of the undisputed sovereignty of the Islamic Republic of Iran," the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters said in a statement carried by state media, warning that any US interference would trigger a "decisive and swift response."
The call comes as 25 commercial vessels transited the strait in the latest 24-hour period, MarineTraffic data show — well below pre-conflict levels. Iran has exported more than 40 million barrels of oil since the US naval blockade was lifted, Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said, compared with zero during the roughly 60-day blockade. The Joint Maritime Information Center has raised the security threat level to "substantial," citing mine risks, navigation interference and drone activity.
For global oil markets, the risk premium embedded in crude prices has faded — Brent fell to its lowest in four months after President Donald Trump said talks were making progress. But with 8,000 non-regional seafarers still stranded in the gulf, according to the International Maritime Organization, and Iran insisting on maintaining control over shipping through the strait, the waterway's status quo remains far from settled.
A Waterway in Limbo
The phone discussion between Iranian and Qatari officials follows a round of indirect US-Iran talks in Doha that produced "positive progress" on issues related to the Islamabad memorandum of understanding, according to Qatar's Foreign Ministry. The next meeting will take place after the funeral processions for Iran's late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who is due to be buried July 9 in Mashhad.
Oman has quietly circulated a proposal to the US and allied governments outlining a long-term framework for managing the strait, suggesting the waterway may not simply return to its pre-conflict status quo, according to CNN. Muscat's plan explores mechanisms for navigational safety, environmental protection and maritime security, including possible service fees.
Iran has been adamant that it expects international recognition of its control over the strait. Tehran has said it will assess tolls on shipping starting in mid-August, after a toll-free period specified by the initial agreement expires. "Hormuz is defined under Iran's command, not CENTCOM," Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi wrote on social media, dismissing a US-led regional security dialogue held in Bahrain.
Seafarers Bear the Cost
The human toll of the standoff is concentrated among the roughly 8,000 seafarers still trapped on vessels in the Persian Gulf, many at or beyond the end of their contracts. Captains have reported rationing food and water, rationing satellite phone time for weekly calls home, and implementing strict mental health protocols — including controlling access to knives — as uncertainty drags past 120 days.
At least 14 civilian seafarers from countries other than Iran have been killed during the war, according to industry estimates. Iran has said about 50 of its own mariners died. The IMO's plan to evacuate sailors was rescinded within days after Iran attacked ships transiting Hormuz in June.
"The biggest worry is how the levels of uncertainty of the war has now gone to a worrying level of acceptance," said Ben Bailey, program director at the Mission to Seafarers. "Seafarers, shipowners used to be terrified at the sight of missiles, being attacked. As time went on, they're normalizing what is otherwise an abnormal situation."
Forward Outlook
The last time the strait faced a sustained disruption — during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s — the Tanker War period saw crude prices spike more than 50 percent before a UN-brokered ceasefire restored flows. Today, with Iran's nuclear program unresolved — Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf said IAEA inspectors "do not have the right to inspect nuclear sites bombed by the US" — and the US pushing for denuclearization as part of any final deal, the path to a lasting resolution remains uncertain.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.