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🔗 CONTINUING COVERAGE: 💥 Six Nations Condemn Iran's Hormuz Attacks: UK, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands and Japan Pledge Naval Support Six of the world's most significant maritime and economic powers issued a joint statement on March 19 condemning Iran's attacks on commercial vessels in the Gulf and the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz, signaling the formation of a multinational naval coalition to reopen the world's most critical energy chokepoint. The statement, published simultaneously by the governments of the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Japan, represents the most coordinated Western and allied response to the Hormuz crisis since it began on February 28. The text was published on the official GOV.UK portal and confirmed by Reuters. What the Statement Says The six leaders condemned "in the strongest terms recent attacks by Iran on unarmed commercial vessels in the Gulf, attacks on civilian infrastructure including oil and gas installations, and the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz by Iranian forces."

Kharg Island Strikes Escalate Supply Chain Risk: Iran's Export Infrastructure Now Contested Territory US military operations have extended beyond Hormuz shipping lanes to target Iran's primary crude export infrastructure, with strikes on Kharg Island and affiliated facilities elevating supply chain risk to a critical new threshold. Kharg Island is responsible for the overwhelming majority of Iran's crude oil exports and stands as one of the world's most strategically vital offshore petroleum terminals. The escalation from transit disruption to infrastructure targeting signals a shift in conflict strategy with far-reaching implications for global energy markets. Previously, the Hormuz crisis centered on maritime transit paralysis: vessels avoiding a contested waterway, insurance markets widening war-risk zones, and commercial traffic dropping 80 percent. That disruption alone triggered 40 percent global oil price increases. The addition of Kharg Island to the contested territory list introduces a new vulnerability layer: the potential degradation of Iran's ability to load and export crude even if Hormuz were somehow reopened. More...👇

🔴 BREAKING Iran's FM Araghchi: "The Strait of Hormuz is open — it is only closed to American and Israeli ships and tankers." This comes hours after US airstrikes hit Iran's Kharg Island oil hub. Araghchi told MSNBC that other nations are "free to pass" but acknowledged many ships avoid the strait due to security concerns. Iran is attempting to split the coalition — signaling to China, India, Turkey and Gulf neighbors that transit is safe for non-US/Israel-linked vessels. The question for shipowners: do you trust that guarantee? #Maritime #Shipping #Hormuz #Iran #WarRisk

ONE FILIPINO. ONE SYSTEMIC FAILURE. When the tugboat Musaffah 2 was struck by a missile near the Strait of Hormuz, it was on a rescue mission — responding to a distress call from a damaged container vessel. Among its crew was a single Filipino seafarer. His name is George Miranda. He is still missing. The Gap in the System Search and rescue operations continue. But as crews searched for Miranda, investigators found something equally alarming: he was never registered with the DMW. Under Philippine law, every Filipino seafarer aboard a foreign vessel must be registered through a DMW-accredited manning agency. Without registration, there is no legal protection. No insurance. No government safety net. Miranda was deployed into one of the world's most dangerous maritime corridors — legally invisible. A Warning That Came Too Late On March 8 — days before the strike — the DMW formally designated the Persian Gulf, Strait of Hormuz, and Gulf of Oman as Warlike Operations Areas. The designation gives Filipino seafarers the right to refuse deployment and mandates additional protections for those who proceed. Miranda had neither. 6,400 Filipinos Still in the Zone The DMW is currently monitoring approximately 6,400 Filipino seafarers in the region. The Miranda case raises an uncomfortable question for the entire industry: how many others are out there — unregistered, unprotected, operating in a war zone? The DMW investigation into the Musaffah 2 shipowner is active. No penalties yet. But enforcement is coming. The Takeaway George Miranda went into a war zone to save another crew. He deserved every protection the system was built to provide. The industry must now answer honestly: was this an exception — or a symptom?

Iranian tankers are going dark. And it's not an accident. 🛢️ Since hostilities began on February 28, crude exports from Kharg Island — Iran's primary oil hub — have collapsed by 51.7%. From 2.04 million barrels a day to 0.98 million. In two weeks. But here's what's really alarming: Six supertankers servicing the terminal have stopped broadcasting their location. Others are transmitting fake coordinates — showing movement while satellite imagery confirms they haven't moved. NORA. HEDY. PING SHUN. All gone dark or spoofing their tracks. This isn't a glitch. It's deliberate concealment — at scale. Iran is losing roughly $100 million per day in export revenue. And they're hiding the evidence. What this means for global oil markets is something most people haven't caught yet. 👇


Sea Drones Enter Gulf Warfare: New Unmanned Threat Vector Deployed Against Tankers Via @EagleIntelMari — real-time maritime intelligence. eagleintelmari.com/news/sea-drone… #Hormuz #MaritimeIntel #ShippingSecurity








This is literally going back to pre-launch public sale. $AZERO

With nations rolling out digital ID programs, how can Zero-Knowledge solutions secure these systems without compromising privacy? 🔊Join us for our next X Spaces discussion with industry leaders: 🎙️ @robviglione, Co-founder of @horizenglobal and @HorizenLabs 🎙️ @pbsIdentity, CEO of @identity 🎙️ @fraser_again, Co-founder of @cheqd_io 🎙️ @matthewniemerg, Co-founder of @Aleph__Zero 🔔Set your reminder for March 13, 11:00AM ET | 16:00PM CET x.com/i/spaces/1yoJM…

