Al Jazeera
centerREPORTUS-Iran ceasefire? Not for Indian sailors being killed in Hormuz

Full BriefGenerated 11d ago
What Happened
The United States military struck three commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz and Gulf of Oman this week, killing three Indian sailors. On Monday, an F-18 Super Hornet from the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln fired a precision munition into the Palau-flagged Marivex, disabling the ship; all 24 Indian crew members were rescued by the Omani military. On Tuesday, the US struck the Palau-flagged Settebello, killing three Indian sailors and leaving the remaining 21 crew to be rescued. On Thursday, US Central Command (CENTCOM) stated it had 'disabled' a third tanker, MT Jalveer, for violating the blockade against Iran, with 20 Indian crew on board. The Indian government summoned a senior US diplomat to demand an explanation, while Manoj Yadav of the Forward Seamen's Union of India claimed the US military is 'targeting' Indian seafarers. Iran's Foreign Ministry condemned the attacks as 'armed robbery and State piracy,' and the International Maritime Organization's secretary-general called them 'unacceptable.'
Key Actors
- ·US Central Command (CENTCOM) and USS Abraham Lincoln(US military forces enforcing a naval blockade of Iranian ports)Fired precision munitions at three commercial vessels — Marivex, Settebello, and MT Jalveer — asserting they violated the blockade, resulting in deaths and damage.
- ·Government of India(State representing Indian nationals killed and endangered in the strikes)Summoned a senior US diplomat to demand an explanation; the issue adds friction to already strained US-India ties ahead of the G7 summit.
- ·Islamic Republic of Iran(State under US naval blockade, engaged in ceasefire talks with Washington)Condemned the US strikes as 'clear evidence of America's ongoing policy of armed robbery and State piracy,' while also speaking optimistically about extending the ceasefire brokered in April.
Why It Matters
The incidents expose the human cost of the US blockade on Iranian oil shipments, repeatedly endangering Indian seafarers and drawing New Delhi into the conflict's periphery. They heighten diplomatic tensions between the US and India just before President Trump and Prime Minister Modi are expected to meet at the G7 summit, and test the durability of the fragile US-Iran ceasefire. The attacks also underscore the perilous state of commercial navigation in the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global chokepoint, and risk escalating proxy dynamics in the region.
Watch For
Monitor the G7 summit in France for any discussion between Trump and Modi regarding the deaths of Indian sailors and their impact on bilateral ties. Watch for an official US response to India's diplomatic démarche and any statements from CENTCOM modifying rules of engagement. Track the progress of US-Iran ceasefire extension talks; any breakdown could lead to renewed attacks on shipping. Observe whether further vessel strikes occur, particularly those involving third-country crews, and whether Iran or aligned actors retaliate against US assets.
Generated 11d ago · Based on full articleAuto-Compiled
This page aggregates and summarizes reporting from Al Jazeera. The Conflict Pulse does not author original reporting. Read the original source for full coverage.
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