Headlines fixate on burning tankers and stranded hulls, but the mechanism that actually paralyzes the Gulf is quieter: insurers pull cover, flag states freeze, and ports suspend turns until someone else absorbs the liability. That stack of decisions lingers after the projectiles stop.
Insurers and flag registries now own the bottleneck
When projectiles hit commercial hulls near the Strait of Hormuz, the UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) puts out the first usable facts. On March 11, 2026, reporting pointed to multiple vessels struck by unknown projectiles north of Oman, including a bulk carrier and a cargo ship with crew evacuations and fires extinguished. UKMTO advised caution and reporting of suspicious activity while investigations continued. The National tied the same wave to merchant traffic in the immediate Hormuz approaches.
Those incident reports do not by themselves stop trade. What stops it is the withdrawal of war risk cover. The Guardian and Reuters both reported in early March 2026 that major marine insurers cancelled war risk protection for large areas of the Gulf and adjacent waters, with effective dates that forced owners to choose between bare transits and uninsured exposure. Reuters later described premiums surging by orders of magnitude, with hull war risk moving from fractions of a percent of value into the low single digits on multi-hundred-million-dollar tankers.
Regional ports and reroutes outlast the flash points
CNN and wire coverage of the wider Iran conflict documented stranded tonnage and disrupted flows; Reuters described scores of vessels anchored or idling as traffic through the strait collapsed. Trade press framed the Hormuz shock alongside Red Sea disruption as a dual chokepoint crisis, where simultaneous pressure on Hormuz and the Suez-Red corridor leaves fewer levers short of the Cape of Good Hope.
That is where ports enter as dominoes. When Bahrain and Qatar reportedly curtailed or suspended operations and LNG flows during the same window, the pain moved from the strait line to berth availability, pilotage, and cargo continuity. Major carriers suspending or rerouting turns a strait closure into a schedule crisis measured in weeks, not hours.
What This Actually Means
The next domino is not another missile video. It is the contractual chain: P and I clubs, hull underwriters, and government backstops such as the reported U.S. reinsurance push through DFC, with Chubb named as lead in CNBC coverage, trying to recreate insurable corridors. Until that language is settled, flag registries and charterers will treat Hormuz as a liability zone first and a waterway second. Reroutes and port congestion then persist after the political headline moves on.
Background
What is the Strait of Hormuz? It is the only sea exit for Persian Gulf oil and LNG to the open ocean; roughly a fifth of global oil and a large share of LNG have historically moved through it. Closure threats are decades old; what changed in March 2026 is the combination of kinetic hits on merchant hulls and simultaneous insurance market exit, which together produced de facto blockade without a single signed blockade decree.