- Iran launched a multi-pronged assault on three U.S. Navy destroyers in the Strait of Hormuz using “multiple missiles, drones and small boats” — U.S. Central Command said no American assets were struck.
- American forces retaliated by eliminating inbound threats and striking Iranian missile/drone launch sites, command and control locations, and intelligence facilities deemed responsible for the attack.
- Brent crude jumped as much as 2.5% toward $103 a barrel on the news, snapping a three-day decline driven by earlier peace-deal optimism; Asian stocks pulled back from record highs.
- Trump downplayed the incident but issued a stark warning on social media: “We’ll knock them out a lot harder, and a lot more violently, in the future, if they don’t get their Deal signed, FAST!” — while insisting the ceasefire remains technically in effect.
What Happened?
Iran attacked three U.S. Navy destroyers operating in the Strait of Hormuz in a multi-weapon assault involving missiles, drones, and small boats. U.S. Central Command confirmed no American assets were struck and that U.S. forces responded by taking out inbound threats and striking Iranian military infrastructure — including missile and drone launch sites and command and control facilities. The UAE also activated air defenses against Iranian missile and drone attacks. The incident came as the U.S. was awaiting Iran’s response via Pakistani mediators to a one-page peace framework that would reopen the strait and begin formal negotiations.
Why It Matters?
This is the most significant kinetic escalation of the Iran conflict in weeks, coming at the most delicate diplomatic moment: the U.S. is awaiting Tehran’s yes or no on a framework deal, Trump is preparing for the May 14–15 Xi summit, and gasoline prices are already at $4.50/gallon with midterms six months away. Iran attacking U.S. warships while simultaneously “evaluating” a peace proposal signals that hardline factions in Tehran may be trying to torpedo negotiations — or extract more concessions before agreeing. The incident also threatens Saudi Arabia and Kuwait’s recently restored willingness to host U.S. military operations, which had been enabling Project Freedom.
What’s Next?
Iran’s formal response to the U.S. peace proposal — expected via Pakistan within days — is now the critical variable. A rejection after this attack would likely trigger the broader bombing campaign Trump has threatened. Even a positive response will face credibility questions after Iranian forces fired on U.S. ships while talks were supposedly progressing. Watch oil markets closely: another Hormuz escalation could push Brent back toward $115. The Trump-Xi summit on May 14–15 adds urgency — Beijing has been pressuring Tehran to negotiate, and a deal before the summit would be a major diplomatic prize for both Washington and Beijing.
Source: Bloomberg












