No international coalition escorts have begun through Hormuz yet
Public statements from U.S. leaders have signaled willingness to escort if required, but operational authorities have not greenlit convoying. The gap reflects current threat conditions and unresolved coordination with industry stakeholders.
Why Strait of Hormuz escorts are on hold now
Implications for U.S. Navy tanker escorts and insurers
For the U.S. Navy, convoying could aggregate risk, compressing high‑value targets into predictable formations that are vulnerable to standoff weapons and mines. Until threat suppression improves, escorts would likely raise rather than reduce exposure.
Country positions on a U.S.-led Strait of Hormuz escort
U.S., G7/France, and EU Operation Aspides: considering coordination
U.S. officials have framed escorts as contingent on achieving safer conditions, while European leaders have floated coordination with industry and insurers. The EU’s Aspides framework could interface with any future international coalition once risks subside.
India weighing national escorts; Pakistan has escorted two vessels
FAQ about Strait of Hormuz escorts
Which countries are prepared to join a U.S.-led coalition to escort tankers, and what have they publicly committed?
No country has publicly committed to begin a U.S.-led coalition now. G7/France are considering coordination; the EU’s Aspides is a framework. India is weighing national escorts; Pakistan acted nationally.
What conditions need to be met before escorts can begin (air superiority, missile defense, minesweeping)?
Officials cite air superiority, degrading Iranian missile threats, and minesweeping capacity sufficient to assure passage. Without these conditions, navies judge Strait of Hormuz escorts too risky to commence.
