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A desperate Trump pitches Maritime Freedom Construct coalition to reopen Strait of Hormuz

The Trump administration is seeking international partners for a “Maritime Freedom Construct” coalition to restore Hormuz navigation, a State Department cable shows, as peace talks stall and Trump signals the blockade could be extended indefinitely.

Wall Street Journal (gated) with the info.

Summary:

  • A State Department cable sent to US embassies on Tuesday revealed plans for a “Maritime Freedom Construct” coalition, asking diplomats to press foreign governments to join a US-led effort to restore freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz
  • The MFC would share maritime intelligence, coordinate diplomatic pressure and enforce sanctions, jointly operated between the State Department and US Central Command
  • The proposal follows Trump’s declaration weeks ago that Hormuz was fully open, a claim quickly contradicted by stalling ship traffic as Iran continued to target vessels that did not pay transit fees
  • Trump told aides on Monday to prepare for an extended blockade until Iran agrees to abandon its nuclear programme, and told reporters Wednesday the blockade is “100% foolproof”
  • Peace talks between the US and Iran remain deadlocked, with the future status of Hormuz described as a key sticking point
  • The MFC is framed as complementary to a parallel European maritime planning effort led by the UK and France, which has involved more than 50 countries, though US officials have criticised European progress as too slow

The Trump administration is recruiting international partners for a new maritime coalition designed to restore commercial navigation through the Strait of Hormuz, according to an internal State Department cable sent to US embassies on Tuesday. The initiative, called the Maritime Freedom Construct, would see partner nations share intelligence, coordinate diplomatic pressure on Iran and help enforce sanctions, with the State Department acting as a diplomatic hub and US Central Command providing real-time maritime awareness for commercial shipping.

The proposal is the clearest acknowledgement yet that the administration cannot reopen the strait unilaterally. Trump declared Hormuz fully open weeks ago, but ship traffic has continued to stall as Iran targets vessels transiting the chokepoint without Tehran’s approval, while the US Navy maintains a parallel blockade on all shipping to and from Iranian ports. The gap between the presidential declaration and the operational reality has left one of the world’s most critical energy chokepoints in effective limbo.

The coalition push sits awkwardly alongside Trump’s recent treatment of allies. He has repeatedly berated NATO members for not providing military support during the Iran war, telling them in late March to take the strait themselves and threatening to withdraw US backing from European security commitments. The MFC cable softens that posture, asking foreign governments whether they wish to be diplomatic or military partners, and explicitly framing the initiative as complementary to the UK and France-led maritime planning effort that has drawn more than 50 countries into discussions. US officials have nonetheless criticised that European process as moving too slowly for a fast-moving crisis.

The broader diplomatic context leaves little room for near-term optimism. Peace talks between Washington and Tehran remain deadlocked, with the status of Hormuz identified as a central unresolved issue. Trump told aides on Monday to prepare for an extended blockade until Iran concedes on nuclear demands, and told reporters on Wednesday that the blockade was “genius” and “100% foolproof.” Until those talks find traction, the Maritime Freedom Construct is a framework in search of a resolution, and energy markets will continue to price the strait’s closure accordingly.

The proposal is diplomatically significant but offers no near-term relief to energy markets. The Maritime Freedom Construct is a coalition-building exercise, not an operational convoy or military escort programme, and commercial traffic through Hormuz remains effectively stalled regardless of how many governments sign a diplomatic statement of intent. Oil markets will note the initiative without moving materially on it.

The more telling signal is what the cable reveals about the state of the conflict. Trump’s own declaration weeks ago that the strait was fully open proved premature, and the administration is now acknowledging that restoring navigation requires multilateral buy-in it does not yet have. With peace talks deadlocked and Trump telling aides to prepare for an extended blockade until Iran concedes on nuclear demands, the timeline for any physical reopening of the strait remains highly uncertain. That sustained uncertainty is the dominant oil price variable, not the diplomatic messaging around it.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.

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