In a terrifying escalation on day 20 of the 2026 US-Iran war, Iranian forces have unleashed a ferocious multi-pronged ᴀssault on commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, turning the world’s most vital oil artery into a blazing battlefield.
Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps units deployed a combination of anti-ship missiles, explosive-laden drones, and fast attack craft to target a convoy of Western tankers. At least four large oil tankers — including vessels flagged under the US, UK, and Norway — were struck in rapid succession. Thick black smoke now rises from burning ships as raging fires consume decks and cargo holds, with dramatic footage showing crews abandoning vessels in lifeboats amid towering flames on the water.

The audacious operation has effectively paralyzed traffic through the narrow chokepoint that carries nearly one-fifth of global oil and LNG supplies. Multiple tankers are reported adrift or listing, triggering immediate fears of mᴀssive environmental disaster and severe supply shocks.
This direct challenge to maritime freedom comes as Iran continues its “Larijani Revenge” campaign. It follows devastating strikes on the joint U.S.-Israeli naval superbase in Bahrain, repeated missile barrages on Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar and Al Dhafra in the UAE, successful cluster munition attacks exposing Israel’s Iron Dome, and intense naval clashes where U.S. Navy SEALs sank three Iranian attack boats.
U.S. Central Command confirms nearly 200 American troops have been injured across the region, with 13 confirmed deaths. President Donald Trump has admitted the U.S. was caught off guard by the scale of Iran’s coordinated retaliation, which has now stretched from land bases to critical sea lanes.

Saudi Arabia recently intercepted 55 Iranian drones targeting its oil facilities, while the U.S. has deployed B-1B Lancer and B-2 Spirit stealth bombers in response. Yet Iran’s latest move in the Strait has sent Brent crude prices surging well beyond $100 per barrel, with analysts warning of potential spikes to $130 or higher if the waterway remains contested.
Global leaders are watching in alarm as burning tankers light up the horizon. The world economy now faces immediate risk from disrupted energy flows, rising fuel costs, and the very real threat of a wider naval war in one of the planet’s most dangerous flashpoints.
The situation is extremely volatile. With flames still raging across the Strait of Hormuz, this conflict has entered its most dangerous phase yet.
