Britain, France Lead Defensive Mission to Keep Strait of Hormuz Open

Britain and France have announced they will lead a defensive, peaceful mission to protect navigation and ensure the Strait of Hormuz remains free of tolls. The initiative comes as representatives from about 50 countries met to discuss free shipping access through the strait, a chokepoint for 20% of the world's fossil fuels. US President Donald Trump spurned the plan, while Iran's foreign minister announced the strait was open, linking it to a Lebanon-Israel ceasefire. France's president and other European leaders demanded the strait's unconditional reopening and opposed any attempts to privatize it.

Key Points: UK, France Launch Mission to Protect Strait of Hormuz Navigation

  • Defensive patrol to protect navigation
  • Opposition to tolls or privatization
  • Follow-up meeting in London planned
  • US spurns the joint initiative
  • Iran announces Strait is open
3 min read

Britain, France announce 'defensive' mission to protect Hormuz navigation​

Britain and France announce a defensive mission to ensure free shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, as global powers meet to address the vital trade route.

"strictly peaceful mission to ensure the Strait must remain completely free - Keir Starmer"

New York, April 17

Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Friday his country and France would lead a "defensive" mission to protect navigation in the Strait of Hormuz.​

He said the mission would be "strictly peaceful" and ensure the Strait should not have tolls and must remain completely free.​

Starmer was speaking at a news conference as representatives of about 50 countries met in person and virtually on free access for shipping through the Strait.​

India was invited, External Affairs Ministry Spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal confirmed, adding that information about the country's role and participation in the meeting would be released later.​

The closure of the Strait, through which 20 per cent of the world's fossil fuel travels, has hit the global economy hard. Starmer said there would be a follow-up meeting next week in London to work out the modalities.​

US President Donald Trump, who had complained about allies and countries using the Strait not working to keep it open, spurned the Britain-France initiative.​

He posted on Truth Social: "I received a call from NATO asking if we would need some help. I TOLD THEM TO STAY AWAY, UNLESS THEY JUST WANT TO LOAD UP THEIR SHIPS WITH OIL. They were useless when needed, a Paper Tiger"!​

Iran's announcement that the Strait would be open to commercial traffic during the ceasefire caught leaders in Paris by surprise.​

Iran's Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi announced on X that the Strait was "completely open," and Trump confirmed it with a "Thank You" post. But Trump also said that the US blockade of Iranian ports would continue.​

In another post, he said that "Iran, with the help of the USA, has removed, or is removing, all sea mines"! There was no confirmation of that from Tehran.​

Araghchi linked the opening of the Strait to the Lebanon-Israel ceasefire that came into force on Thursday, but Trump said it was not.​

France's President Emmanuel Macron said the countries at the Paris meeting demanded "full immediate and unconditional reopening of the Strait of Hormuz by all parties". They opposed any attempt to privatise the Strait or to impose tolls on ships passing through it.​

Iran was reported to have charged fees to let ships through, and Trump has spoken of joint US-Iran control of the Strait.​

Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Italy's Prime Minister Georgia Meloni, who were at the news conference alongside Starmer and Macron, said their countries would contribute to the peaceful patrol.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
While the "defensive" mission sounds good on paper, it feels like more Western powers trying to police global waterways. Trump's reaction is chaotic as usual. India should tread carefully and ensure its voice is heard independently, not just as part of someone else's initiative.
P
Priyanka N
Free navigation is a must for global trade. But why is there always a new meeting next week in London or Paris? The solution should involve all regional stakeholders, including Iran, not just decisions made far away. Hope India's role is substantial.
A
Aman W
Trump's posts are a circus 🤡. One minute thanking Iran, the next continuing a blockade. This instability hurts everyone. Britain and France leading a peaceful mission is a positive step, but it needs broad support to actually work.
K
Karthik V
The mention of tolls is worrying. If Iran or anyone else starts charging fees, it will directly increase the cost of oil and gas for countries like India. Our government should make it very clear that we oppose any such commercialisation of an international strait.
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Michael C
Respectfully, I think the article buries the lede. Iran says it's open, Trump confirms, but the US blockade continues? And now a European patrol? The situation seems resolved and escalated at the same time. Confusing signals are bad for the global economy.

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