Iran violated Strait of Hormuz deal, faces US military strikes and blockade
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The White House on Thursday, 17 July accused Iran of breaching a memorandum of understanding with the United States by attacking commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, with Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt confirming that President Donald Trump authorised renewed military strikes in direct response to Tehran's violations. Despite the escalation, diplomatic contacts between the two sides have not been severed.
What Iran Allegedly Violated
According to Leavitt, the memorandum of understanding — which Iran signed — explicitly prohibited Tehran from firing on commercial vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz. She stated that Iran's attacks on shipping constituted a clear breach of that commitment. 'The reason for the recent strikes over the course of the last several days is because Iran violated the memorandum of understanding that we struck with them,' Leavitt said.
'Specifically in the memorandum of understanding that they signed, they were not to fire on commercial vessels moving through the Strait of Hormuz,' she added.
Trump's Response: Strikes and a Naval Blockade
The US military response has been substantial. Leavitt announced that President Trump has reimposed a naval blockade on all vessels entering and departing Iranian ports. More than 10,000 American sailors, Marines, and airmen — backed by two aircraft carriers, over 20 warships, and dozens of aircraft — are enforcing the blockade, she said.
During the first 24 hours of the blockade, US CENTCOM reportedly redirected two compliant commercial vessels and disabled one non-compliant vessel. Leavitt stressed that the Strait of Hormuz remained open for ships not trading with Iranian ports. 'President Trump is not going to sit by and allow these active acts of terrorism to take place in the strait without ensuring Iran pays consequences for that,' she said.
Diplomacy Still Open, But Conditional
Despite the military escalation, Leavitt said Iran had continued to express interest in reaching a deal with Washington. 'Iran very much continues to talk to the United States of America and express that they want to make a deal with us, because they are suffering devastating blows on behalf of our United States military,' she said.
She noted that following Operation Epic Fury, the two sides had entered a diplomatic phase — but Iran subsequently violated the agreement, triggering the renewed strikes. 'The President is always open and willing to diplomacy. He is the peace through strength President,' Leavitt said, adding that talks were ongoing: 'They have expressed they still want to make a deal to the President. We're talking to them.'
No Rift Between Trump and Vance, White House Says
Leavitt pushed back on suggestions that conflicting public statements from President Trump and Vice-President JD Vance on Iran diplomacy reflected internal divisions. 'I can tell you the President, Vice-President, are on the exact same page,' she said. She added that Operation Epic Fury had left Iran's leadership 'fragmented and weakened.'
What Comes Next
The combination of active military strikes, a fully enforced naval blockade, and ongoing back-channel diplomacy places the US-Iran standoff at a critical juncture. The Strait of Hormuz — through which a significant share of global oil exports transits — remains a flashpoint. Whether Tehran chooses to return to compliance or escalate further will likely determine the next phase of this confrontation.