Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Navy has issued a critical military warning explicitly rejecting the International Maritime Organization’s (IMO) newly announced southern evacuation corridor in the Strait of Hormuz. Broadcast via Sepah News, the IRGC declared the UN-and Oman-backed passage “highly dangerous and prohibited,” demanding that all commercial vessels route exclusively through its northern coastal corridor under mandatory VHF Channel 16 coordination. This unilateral move threatens to fracture the fragile Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed just last week to halt the 2026 U.S.-Iran War, freezing maritime traffic and triggering a swift diplomatic rebuke from U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the GCC summit in Bahrain.
MANAMA, Bahrain – June 25, 2026 (STL.News) — The fragile diplomatic architecture designed to halt the 2026 U.S.-Iran War faced its first major operational crisis on Thursday. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Navy issued an explicit military warning to all commercial shipping vessels entering the Strait of Hormuz, rejecting a newly established international evacuation corridor and threatening direct kinetic action against non-compliant ships.
The directive, broadcast via the IRGC’s official media arm Sepah News, has effectively paralyzed the United Nations’ efforts to extract over 11,000 seafarers trapped in the Persian Gulf. It also places immense strain on the newly signed Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), threatening to upend global energy markets less than a week after a tentative ceasefire was reached.
The Flashpoint: The IRGC Rejects the IMO’s Southern Corridor
The current escalation stems from a major operational directive issued on June 24 by the UN’s International Maritime Organization (IMO). Under the leadership of Secretary-General Arsenio Dominguez, the IMO finalized a massive, highly coordinated evacuation framework designed to safely extract between 500 and 600 commercial ships stranded in the Gulf since the outbreak of hostilities on February 28, 2026.
To mitigate the pervasive threat of marine mines and volatile security conditions, the IMO designated two temporary, deconflicted routes for exiting the chokepoint:
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The Northern Route: Transiting directly through Iranian coastal waters.
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The Southern Route: Traversing the territorial waters of Oman and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
[Strait of Hormuz Shipping Lanes - June 2026]
[ IRANIAN COASTLINE ] -> (Northern Route: Demanded by IRGC / Subject to Fees)
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[ International Shipping Channel - 21-Mile Transit Chokepoint ]
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[ OMAN / UAE WATERS ] -> (Southern Route: IMO Evacuation Plan / Opposed by Iran)
By Thursday morning, the IRGC Navy issued a sweeping counter-directive, explicitly declaring the UN-backed Southern Route “unacceptable, highly dangerous, and prohibited.” The IRGC statement asserted that the southern alternative was drawn up “without prior notice or coordination” with Tehran. The Guards warned that the only authorized path through the 21-mile-wide chokepoint is the Northern Route, which runs directly along the Iranian coastline under their immediate administrative control.
Official IRGC Mandate: All transiting vessels must maintain direct, continuous radio coordination with the IRGC Naval Command via VHF Channel 16. The statement warned that any vessel attempting unauthorized crossings or failing to comply with routing demands “will be dealt with” by Iranian naval forces.
Geopolitical Fallout: A Stress Test for the Islamabad MoU
This sudden maritime brinkmanship represents a direct structural stress test for the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding. Signed on June 17, 2026, by U.S. President Donald Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian—and formally mediated by Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on June 18—the 14-point interim framework was intended to halt 118 days of devastating regional warfare.
Under the core terms of the Islamabad agreement:
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The United States agreed to lift its punitive naval blockade and, through the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), authorize a range of Iranian energy-related activities through August.
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Iran is committed to reopening the Strait of Hormuz to unhindered commercial transit.
However, the IRGC’s latest maneuver exposes a glaring disconnect between Iran’s diplomatic negotiators and its hardline paramilitary forces on the water. By asserting an absolute veto over maritime traffic and attempting to enforce unilateral maritime insurance requirements and service “fees” on vessels using its northern corridor, Tehran is seeking to monetize and control the entrance to the Gulf.
High-Stakes Diplomacy in Manama
The timing of the IRGC’s ultimatum has intensified diplomatic friction across the region. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio arrived in Manama, Bahrain, to address a critical meeting of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) to reassure regional allies—particularly Saudi Arabia—that Washington’s interim agreement would not compromise Gulf security or trade stability.
Addressing the summit, Secretary Rubio delivered a sharp rebuke to Tehran’s maritime assertions:
“While we want a deal, we don’t want a deal at any price. We want to ensure that there is no part of this deal that’s undertaken that in any way undermines the security, the stability, or the prosperity of any of our partners in the Gulf region.”
— U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio
Rubio emphasized that there is “zero support” among Gulf nations or the international community for Iranian-imposed tolls or arbitrary restrictions in an international waterway.
Simultaneously, Oman’s top diplomat, Badr Albusaidi, moved to defuse rumors of a joint toll system, clarifying that Muscat’s future maritime arrangements regarding the Strait “do not entail the imposition of any transit fees.”
Industry Impact: The Commercial Catch-22
For global shipping syndicates, commodity traders, and war-risk insurers, the IRGC’s declaration creates a severe operational dilemma. While the Strait of Hormuz had briefly seen a 270% surge in transit traffic following the initial reopening announcement, the maritime corridor is once again frozen by legal and physical uncertainty.
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| IMO Southern Corridor Option | IRGC Controlled Northern Route Option |
+------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
| • Backed by United Nations & Oman | • Mandated by Tehran & IRGC Navy |
| • Bypasses Iranian coastal waters | • Enforces mandatory VHF Channel 16 |
| • Threatened with IRGC interception| • Imposes arbitrary fees & oversight |
| • Approved by global insurers | • Risk of asset seizure or delays |
+------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
Maritime intelligence firms and security consultancies are currently advising shipmasters inside the Gulf to remain at anchor and strictly await further instructions. Moving forward without explicit deconfliction leaves commercial crews vulnerable to drone strikes, fast-boat harassment, or sea mines.
Despite the current maritime standoff, diplomatic channels remain functioning. Pakistan’s Foreign Office spokesperson, Tahir Andrabi, confirmed that the interim gap in negotiations is only temporary, with formal U.S.-Iran diplomatic talks expected to resume next Tuesday to address the 60-day window toward a permanent peace treaty. However, whether the IRGC will respect those diplomatic efforts on the water remains to be seen.