Sun, 17 May 2026
Middle East News Updated May 17, 2026 · 15:11

Iran Warns Against Transit of Enemy Weapons Through Strait of Hormuz

Iran has warned it will no longer allow enemy military equipment to transit through the Strait of Hormuz. The country has prepared a new mechanism to regulate maritime traffic, open only to commercial vessels and cooperating parties. This comes amid ongoing US-Iran tensions, with the US and China agreeing Iran cannot have nuclear weapons. The US claims Iran is losing 500 million dollars per day due to a naval blockade.

"We will not permit that again": Iran warns against transit of 'enemy' weapons through Strait of Hormuz

Tehran, May 17

Iran said that it will no longer allow "enemy" military equipment to transit through the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz, according to Iran's First Vice President Mohammad Reza Aref, as reported by Al Jazeera.

Aref said, "We had given up our right of sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz, and we previously allowed the passage of military equipment that was intended to be used against us through the Strait of Hormuz. We will not permit that again."

Earlier on Saturday, Head of the Iranian Parliament's National Security Committee Ebrahim Azizi said that Iran has prepared a "professional mechanism" to regulate maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz through a designated route, which will be unveiled soon.

In a post on X, Azizi said the proposed mechanism has been developed within the framework of Iran's national sovereignty and with the aim of ensuring the security of international trade. He further stated that only commercial vessels and parties cooperating with Iran would be permitted to benefit from the mechanism. Azizi also said that the proposed route would remain closed to operators associated with the so-called "freedom project" (United States).

"Iran, within the framework of its national sovereignty and the guarantee of international trade security, has prepared a professional mechanism to manage traffic in the Strait of Hormuz along a designated route, which will be unveiled soon. In this process, only commercial vessels and parties cooperating with Iran will benefit from it. The necessary fees will be collected for the specialized services provided under this mechanism. This route will remain closed to the operators of the so-called 'freedom project'," said the 'X' post from Azizi.

This development came amidst the ongoing tensions within Middle East region due to US-Iran conflict.

Meanwhile, on Friday (local time), the United States and China agreed that "Iran can't have nuclear weapons," and that the Strait of Hormuz must be opened, according to US President Donald Trump. President Trump met with his Chinese conterpart XI Jinping during his three-day state visit to China, where he discussed the ongoing West Asia conflict and other regional issues.

Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One following his departure from China, President Trump asserted that the US controls the Strait of Hormuz, while emphasising Iran has been hit with 500 million dollars of loss per day in the past two and a half weeks due to US's naval blockade in the region.

"I have a lot of respect for him. On Iran, he feels strongly that they can't have a nuclear weapon--said that very strongly, they can't have a nuclear weapon--and he wants them to open up the strait. But as he said, they close it and you close them. And it's true, we (US) control the strait, and they (Iran) have done no business in the last two and a half weeks, which is approximately 500 million dollars a day," said President Trump.

The ceasefire between Washington and Tehran was announced on April 7 after a month-long period of hostility in the region following US-Israeli joint strikes on Iran on February 28.

— ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Priya S
The US and China agreeing on Iran's nuclear weapons? That's unusual—they rarely see eye-to-eye. Trump saying "we control the strait" is typical bluster, but the reality is Iran is right there. This could escalate quickly. Hope diplomacy prevails. 🙏
R
Rohit P
India should be neutral here—we've historically had good relations with Iran (like the Chabahar port deal) but also strong ties with the US. If Iran starts charging fees for passage through Hormuz, that could spike global oil prices and hurt our economy. A balanced approach is key.
M
Michael C
Two weeks of blockade costing Iran $500M/day? That's unsustainable. Their move to regulate the strait is a Hail Mary to regain control. But closing it to US-aligned operators is a dangerous game—the US Navy has the firepower to enforce freedom of navigation. This could be the preamble to another confrontation.
K
Kavya N
Honestly, Iran's "professional mechanism" sounds like a toll booth with political conditions. 😅 They'll charge fees from cooperative parties and deny passage to others. But this is risky—if they block a tanker, the US might respond militarily. Stability in the Gulf benefits everyone, including India. Let's hope cool heads prevail.
D
David E
Trump claiming the US controls the strait is classic overconfidence. Iran controls one side and has anti-ship missiles. The

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