I asked grok if the strait of hormuz is an international strait that should be open to everyone.

What’s your point?

Everyone knows the Straits has been considered international water, open to everyone, as it was up until this war, that’s nothing new

And as for Grok, “Grok, the AI chatbot developed by xAI, provides a mix of accurate, real-time information and inaccurate, fabricated content("hallucinations"). It is designed to be less restricted and more "witty" than competitors, but studies and user reports suggest it frequently produces inaccuracies, particularly when relying on unverified chatter from the X platform” - AI
TechCrunch +4
AI is great but it also depends upon the question asked. Legina the Snitch Bitch, like all MAGAts, is a liar. She lies by telling falsehoods or, more often, half-truths.

Example: Google AI -
Is the Strait of Hormuz considered freedom of navigation?

Yes, the Strait of Hormuz is legally considered a "strait used for international navigation," which grants all vessels a non-negotiable right of transit passage under international law. [1, 2]
However, as of April 13, 2026, this legal right is at the center of a major international crisis. While global powers maintain that freedom of navigation is a universal right, Iran has recently attempted to rewrite these rules by imposing tolls and restricted access, leading to a U.S. naval blockade. [1, 2]




⚖️ Legal Status: Transit vs. Innocent Passage
The debate over whether "freedom of navigation" applies depends on which international rulebook is used:

  • Transit Passage (UNCLOS Standard): Under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), ships and aircraft have the right to continuous and expeditious transit. This right cannot be suspended, even during times of tension.
  • Innocent Passage (Iran's Position): Iran argues that because it never ratified UNCLOS, it is only bound by older "innocent passage" rules. This would give Iran more power to monitor, board, or even temporarily suspend traffic for "security reasons".
  • Customary Law: The U.S. and most of the world argue that transit passage has become customary international law, meaning it applies to everyone regardless of whether they signed the specific treaty. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]



2026 Crisis & Blockade
Current military actions have complicated the practical reality of "freedom of navigation": [1, 2]

  • U.S. Blockade (April 2026): President Trump ordered a naval blockade effective April 13, 2026, specifically targeting ships entering or leaving Iranian ports. The U.S. maintains this does not impede "neutral transit passage" to other nations like Kuwait or the UAE.
  • Iranian Tolls: In March 2026, Iran began demanding transit fees—sometimes as high as $2 million per ship—to allow passage through the strait. The International Maritime Organization (IMO) has declared these tolls illegal, calling them a breach of maritime law.
  • Mine Clearing: The U.S. Navy and allies (including the U.K.) have been conducting operations to destroy mines laid by Iran to restore the waterway's safe use for global commerce. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]



🌍 Why It Matters
The Strait of Hormuz is the world's most important energy chokepoint. [1]

  • Volume: Roughly 20% of the world’s oil and 20% of global LNG pass through this 21-mile-wide channel.
  • Precedent: Legal experts from Just Security warn that allowing any nation to "sell" access to an international strait would set a dangerous precedent for other critical routes like the Strait of Malacca or Gibraltar. [1, 2, 3]
 
Saying ‘Iran and Oman share it, therefore it’s not international’ is toddler-map logic. The issue is not who colors the coastline. The issue is whether the waterway is a strait used for international navigation. Hormuz plainly is, which is why global shipping lanes run through it and why maritime law gives passage rights instead of letting coastal states play feudal toll-keeper.
 
Back
Top