One side says the waterway is open for business. The other side says the blockade will continue until a deal is reached. Both cannot be true. Yet both are claiming victory.
Iran’s foreign minister announced that the Strait of Hormuz is “completely open” to commercial ships for the remainder of the ceasefire. Moments later, President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social. First came “THANK YOU!” Then came the clarification: the US naval blockade of Iranian ports will continue until a peace deal is agreed.
The contradiction is not an accident. It is a deliberate reflection of two governments talking past each other — and the world’s oil markets are caught in the middle.

The Strait That Moves the World
The Strait of Hormuz is not just a narrow passage of water between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman. It is the most critical chokepoint for global oil supplies. Nearly one-fifth of the world’s petroleum passes through its waters. When the strait is disrupted, prices spike. When it flows freely, markets breathe easier.
Oil prices dropped after Iran’s announcement that the Strait is open. That is not a detail. It is evidence of how closely the world watches every signal from Tehran and Washington. But the price drop may be premature. Trump has made clear that the blockade is not ending until a deal is reached. And no deal has been reached.
The ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon — which began earlier with celebrations and fireworks in Beirut — is a separate but connected conflict. That truce is fragile. More than 2,000 people in Lebanon have been killed in six weeks of fighting. One in five people in Lebanon has been displaced. Israel reports two of its civilians and 13 soldiers killed. The ceasefire is holding for now. But security correspondents warn that it could collapse at any moment.
The connection to the Strait of Hormuz is Iran. Tehran backs Hezbollah in Lebanon. The same Iranian leadership that is negotiating — or not negotiating — with Washington over the strait is also managing its proxies across the region. The two conflicts are not identical. But they are not separate either.
What Iran Is Saying
Iran’s foreign minister declared the strait “completely open” to commercial ships for the remainder of the ceasefire. That statement serves multiple purposes. It signals to global markets that Iran is not the aggressor in the shipping crisis. It pressures the US by suggesting that the blockade is unnecessary because Iran is not blocking anything. And it positions Tehran as the reasonable party — open for business, while Washington maintains a military blockade.
The phrase “for the remainder of the ceasefire” is the key detail. Iran is not promising permanent openness. It is offering a temporary window. If the ceasefire ends, the strait could close again. That is not a concession. It is a warning.
What Trump Is Saying
Trump’s “THANK YOU!” post appeared to acknowledge Iran’s announcement. But the follow-up was unmistakable: the US naval blockade of Iranian ports will continue until a peace deal is agreed. Not until the ceasefire holds. Not until Iran makes a gesture. Until a deal.
That is a much higher bar. A ceasefire is temporary. A deal is permanent — or at least intended to be. Trump is not interested in a pause. He is demanding a resolution. And he is using the blockade as leverage to get it.
The blockade has already intercepted tankers and halted seaborne trade in and out of Iran. The US military says it is enforcing the blockade impartially against vessels of all nations. Iran has warned that it will disrupt trade flows in the Gulf, the Sea of Oman, and the Red Sea if the blockade continues. Neither side has blinked.
What Is Really Happening
Here is the truth that neither Iran nor the US will state directly. The Strait is not “open” in any normal sense. Iran has effectively shut the waterway to all vessels except its own, demanding that passage be permitted only under Iranian control and subject to a fee. The US blockade is a response to that shutdown. Both sides are claiming the moral high ground. Both sides are imposing restrictions. The difference is that Iran claims its restrictions are a sovereign authority. The US claims its blockade is a response to Iranian aggression.
Commercial shipping is not moving freely. Tankers are being turned back. Oil prices remain volatile. The ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon could collapse at any moment. And the underlying dispute over Iran’s nuclear program, its regional proxies, and its control of the strait has not been resolved.
The ceasefire is a pause. The blockade is a pressure campaign. The Strait is a battlefield of narratives as much as a waterway for oil.
The Bottom Line
Iran says the Strait of Hormuz is completely open to commercial ships for the remainder of the ceasefire. Trump says the US blockade will continue until a peace deal is agreed. Oil prices dropped after Iran’s announcement, but the underlying reality has not changed. The strait is not functioning normally. The US is intercepting vessels. Iran is threatening retaliation. A fragile ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon is holding for now, but could break at any moment.
The world wants to know who is telling the truth about the Strait. The real answer is that neither side is telling the whole truth. Iran is open — but only for now, and only on its terms. The US blockade is continuing — but it is a response to Iranian restrictions that predate it. The only fact that is not in dispute is that the strait remains the most dangerous chokepoint in global energy markets. And until a deal is reached, it will stay that way.





