A Look at
the Escalating Battle for the Strait of Hormuz
There are
several ways the United States could attempt to reopen the waterway, all of
which carry substantial risks.
Luke
Broadwater Helene Cooper Eric Schmitt
By Luke
BroadwaterHelene Cooper and Eric Schmitt
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/20/us/politics/battle-for-strait-of-hormuz.html
March 20,
2026
As the
United States presses ahead with its military campaign against Iran, the Strait
of Hormuz has emerged as the war’s most pivotal battlefield.
In
response to U.S. and Israeli airstrikes, Iran has largely blockaded the strait,
snarling oil shipments and rapidly causing the price of gasoline to rise.
With the
war approaching the three-week mark, President Trump is facing a battery of
military and diplomatic choices that are testing his abilities as a leader.
The
United States has been flowing military resources into the region to deal with
the problem, and carrying out waves of attacks against Iranian forces and
installations in the hopes of reopening the strait — a goal vital to ending the
war and addressing the economic and political pressures on the White House.
The
president has also pushed for allies to send warships to protect oil tankers in
the strait. But he has built up little good will with those countries, after
repeatedly subjecting them to punishing tariffs, insults and threats.
On
Friday, Mr. Trump said he would leave reopening the strait to the countries
that use it, claiming the United States did not. “If asked, we will help these
Countries in their Hormuz efforts, but it shouldn’t be necessary once Iran’s
threat is eradicated,” he wrote on social media.
It was
one in a string of mixed messages the Trump administration has sent about the
war.
Here are
the options under consideration to attempt to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, all
of which are complex and carry substantial risks. None of them would guarantee
a quick end to the conflict.
Eliminate
threats to shipping from land-based attacks
Before
the Navy escorts commercial vessels through the strait, U.S. commanders want to
destroy as many of Iran’s missiles and drones as possible.
What it
would take: In recent days, American warplanes have ramped up strikes against
missiles and their launchers along Iran’s southern flank that could target
slow-moving oil tankers and giant cargo ships.
Earlier
this week, the military’s Central Command said that Air Force F-15E
fighter-bombers had dropped several 5,000-pound bombs to penetrate layers of
rock and concrete to destroy underground bunkers storing cruise missiles and
support equipment.
Gen. Dan
Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said that Iran’s ability to
launch missiles had declined by 90 percent since the start of the war. But he
acknowledged that Iranian forces still had some firepower left.
General
Caine added that some regional allies, which he did not identify, were using
Apache helicopter gunships to “handle one-way attack drones,” one of the most
potent weapons Iran has used to threaten shipping, as well as neighboring Arab
countries and their energy sites across the Persian Gulf.
U.S.
officials appear to disagree about whether Iran has already started mining the
strait. Intelligence officials say yes, while Pentagon officials say they have
not seen clear evidence.
What it
would take: Clearing the narrow waterway of Iranian mines would be a weekslong
operation, according to one former naval officer who was stationed on a
minesweeper in the Persian Gulf. And it could put U.S. sailors directly in
harm’s way.
Iran is
believed to maintain a variety of naval mines. They include small limpet mines
containing just a few pounds of explosives that divers place directly on a
ship’s hull and typically detonate after a set amount of time. Iran also has
larger moored mines that float just under the water’s surface, releasing 100
pounds or more of explosive force when they come in contact with an
unsuspecting ship.
More
advanced “bottom” mines sit on the seafloor. They use a combination of sensors
— magnetic, acoustic, pressure and seismic — to determine when a ship is
nearby, and explode with hundreds of pounds of force.
“All it
takes is for one of those things to get through to shut down traffic,” said
Rear Adm. John F. Kirby, a retired naval officer. “The fear alone can be
paralyzing to the shipping industry, as we have already seen.”
How
Iran’s Naval Mines Work
Iran’s
arsenal of some 5,000 mines could further complicate efforts to restart
shipping in the Persian Gulf.
The Navy
had four minesweepers in the Gulf, each with 100 sailors aboard, based in
Bahrain. But those ships are gone now, one official said, replaced with three
littoral combat ships that can sweep for mines but are also used for other
purposes. And two of the ships, the U.S.S. Tulsa and the U.S.S. Santa Barbara,
were spotted far from the Middle East this week, between Malaysia and
Singapore, according to the military website The War Zone.
Go after
Iran’s navy and fast boat fleet
The
Pentagon has targeted the Iranian navy since the opening hours of the war,
destroying or damaging more than 120 vessels, including several submarines. The
goal was to blunt Iran’s ability to shut down the strait and threaten
neighboring countries.
But
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps also has hundreds of speed boats. A
fighter armed with a rocket-propelled grenade aboard one of these boats could
slip through U.S. defenses and land a deadly blow to a tanker or warship.
What it
would take: Low-flying Air Force A-10 Warthog planes are “hunting and killing
fast-attack watercraft” in the contested sea lanes, General Caine said. The
A-10 was developed to provide close air support for U.S. ground troops, but has
been repurposed to strike ships at sea, he said.
U.S.
warplanes are also striking speedboats hiding in coastal redoubts, but Iran has
positioned some of them in civilian ports, increasing the risks to civilians
from any American attacks.
The U.S.
military is also attacking storage areas for naval drones before the drones can
be launched.
Invade
Kharg Island
Adm. Brad
Cooper, the head of the military’s Central Command, said the U.S. attack
against Iranian military sites on Kharg Island, the country’s oil export hub,
had destroyed more than 90 targets, including bunkers for naval mines and
missiles.
That has
softened the island’s defenses if Mr. Trump follows through on his threat to
seize the island and put a stranglehold on Iran’s oil economy, a possibility
the Pentagon has gamed out in war-planning scenarios for years.
But
Iranian troops are still on the island, and U.S. commanders say that such a
mission would be risky.
What it
would take: Some 2,200 Marines on three warships — armed with drones, attack
helicopters and warplanes — have cut short a patrol in the Indo-Pacific region,
and are expected to arrive in the Persian Gulf region later next week. The
Marines are trained to conduct amphibious landings.
The U.S.
military is dispatching 2,500 additional Marines to the Middle East next month,
officials said Friday. They are expected to replace or augment those en route
to the region now.
Another
option involves Special Operations forces and paratroopers from elite units,
like the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division, taking the island. Once in control, the
Americans would likely be subject to attack from any remaining land- or
sea-based Iranian forces.
On
Thursday, the president said he had no plans to commit ground forces to the
war, before qualifying: “If I were, I certainly wouldn’t tell you.” He added
that he would “do whatever’s necessary to keep the price” of oil down.
Use naval
escorts to escort oil tankers
Mr. Trump
said on Friday that escorting oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz was “a
simple military maneuver.” Naval experts say it is anything but.
In fact,
of all of Mr. Trump’s options for opening up the strait, naval escorts are
perhaps the trickiest.
What it
would take: Naval escorts are cumbersome operations that require not just Navy
destroyers and littoral combat ships, but also attack aircraft.
The Navy
has deployed around 12 destroyers and littoral combat ships to the region and
could certainly send more, although that could take weeks, Navy officials said.
A Navy destroyer, which is equipped with the Aegis Combat System that uses
computers and radar to track and target, can protect oil tankers by firing
cruise and ballistic missiles at land targets in Iran, while Standard
antimissile systems can intercept incoming threats.
But one
Navy official said that would require a high ratio of Navy destroyers to
commercial ships, and would likely be a huge strain on naval assets. The
Pentagon has already requested an additional $200 billion in funding for the
war.
Mark
Montgomery, a retired rear admiral, estimated that about a dozen Navy
destroyers, with armed helicopters and other aircraft overhead, would be needed
to escort five or six tankers or cargo ships at a time through the strait — a
transit he said could take roughly 10 to 12 hours.
During
the so-called tanker war between Iran and Iraq in the 1980s, the United States
escorted reflagged Kuwaiti tankers through the Persian Gulf and the Strait of
Hormuz, part of Operation Earnest Will. The U.S.S. Samuel B. Roberts was nearly
destroyed by a mine, and the U.S.S. Stark was heavily damaged by Iraqi
missiles. In the end, 37 American sailors were killed.
Luke
Broadwater covers the White House for The Times.
Helene
Cooper is a Pentagon correspondent for The Times. She was previously an editor,
diplomatic correspondent and White House correspondent.
Eric
Schmitt is a national security correspondent for The Times. He has reported on
U.S. military affairs and counterterrorism for more than three decades.


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