In a direct challenge to global shipping, Iranian forces launched a fierce ᴀssault in the Strait of Hormuz, attacking multiple commercial vessels with fast-attack boats, drones, and anti-ship missiles. At least three tankers were hit, triggering mᴀssive fires and forcing emergency evacuations as thick black smoke rose over the critical waterway.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed the strikes were retaliation for recent U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iranian oil infrastructure. Tehran has once again demonstrated its willingness to weaponize the Strait of Hormuz — the narrow chokepoint through which 20% of the world’s oil flows — threatening to plunge the global economy into chaos.
But what happened next was brutal.
The United States responded with overwhelming and lethal force. U.S. Navy submarines and aircraft from the USS Abraham Lincoln launched a ferocious counterattack, sinking at least seven IRGC fast-attack boats and destroying several coastal missile launch sites along Iran’s southern shore. Reports indicate American forces used precision-guided munitions and naval gunfire to systematically neutralize Iranian naval ᴀssets in the area. Satellite imagery shows heavy damage to Iranian positions, with multiple vessels left burning and sinking.
Pentagon sources described the operation as “decisive and proportionate,” while President Trump stated, “Nobody threatens the world’s oil supply on our watch.”

This rapid escalation comes as Operation Epic Fury continues to exact a heavy toll. The U.S. has already spent more than $11 billion in munitions, both American supercarriers have faced repeated damage and fires, and critical resources are being stretched thin. Israel remains under heavy Iranian missile pressure, while Iranian proxies continue to strike U.S. positions across Iraq and the Gulf.
Iran’s attempt to choke the Strait has so far failed to fully paralyze shipping, but it has dramatically raised the stakes. The brutal U.S. response shows Washington is prepared to use overwhelming firepower to keep the waterway open — but every exchange only deepens this dangerous and costly war of attrition.
As burning ships and Iranian naval wreckage litter the waters of the Strait of Hormuz, the world is left wondering: How much more destruction will it take before one side finally blinks?
The naval war just got a lot more violent.
