| Relevance: GS Paper II (International Relations — India & West Asia, Indians abroad) & GS Paper I (World Geography — choke points) | Source: MEA briefings & news reports, June 2026 |
1 · What happened
| To stop Iran’s oil exports during the ongoing 2026 conflict in West Asia, the United States placed a naval blockade on Iran in April 2026. To enforce it, US forces fired on oil tankers passing near the Strait of Hormuz. Three ships carrying Indian crew were hit in just four days off the coast of Oman, and on the tanker MT Settebello, three Indian seafarers were killed — the first Indian deaths since the blockade began. Then came a turn towards peace. On 11 June 2026, the United States called off fresh strikes, saying a deal with Iran was close. These talks are being helped along by Pakistan as a go-between. |
2 · The Story in Simple Words
| First, what is the Strait of Hormuz?
It is a narrow sea passage that joins the Persian Gulf to the open ocean. Iran lies to its north; Oman and the UAE (United Arab Emirates) to its south. About one-fifth of the world’s sea-carried oil passes through this single channel. Because it is so narrow, even a small clash here can disturb the world’s oil supply and push up fuel prices everywhere — including in India, which buys most of its crude oil through these waters. |
| 1 | The blockade begins. To cut Iran’s oil income, the United States blocks ships from entering or leaving Iranian ports and tightens control near the Strait of Hormuz. |
| 2 | Tankers get caught. US forces strike tankers accused of carrying Iranian oil. Three ships with Indian crew are hit in four days off Oman. |
| 3 | Indian lives lost. On the tanker MT Settebello, three Indian seafarers are killed — the first Indian deaths since the blockade started. The crews of the other ships are rescued safely. |
| 4 | A deal takes shape. On 11 June 2026, the US halts fresh strikes as talks — helped by Pakistan — move ahead. If a deal is signed, the US says it will end the blockade and reopen the strait, though Iran is yet to confirm. |
| One idea you must know — “Flag of convenience”. A ship can fly the flag of a small, far-off country it has little real link with — such as Palau or Guinea-Bissau — mainly to pay lower fees and follow lighter rules. Here is the catch: a ship is protected by the country of its flag, not by the home country of its crew. So even when Indians are on board, India cannot simply send its Navy to defend a Palau- or Guinea-Bissau-flagged ship. This is the heart of the present crisis. |
- Why India is so exposed: India is among the world’s largest suppliers of seafarers. When a choke point like Hormuz turns violent, large numbers of Indian workers are caught in the danger zone.
- Operation Sankalp: the Indian Navy’s mission in the Gulf of Oman and Persian Gulf, running since June 2019, to give safe passage to Indian-flagged merchant ships through the Strait of Hormuz.
- DG Shipping (Directorate General of Shipping): India’s shipping regulator under the Merchant Shipping Act, 1958. It can order live tracking of Indian crews and tighten the agencies that place them on risky ships.
- India’s stake in the deal: a settled strait means safer Indian crews and a steady flow of oil. A signed peace would ease fuel prices at home, while fresh fighting would do the opposite — so India is closely watching the outcome.
| UPSC Value Box | ||||||||||||||||||
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| MCQ Practice Question |
Q. With reference to the Strait of Hormuz and maritime security, consider the following statements:
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? |
Answer: (a) 1 and 2 only
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