7 published verifications about Strait Of Hormuz Strait Of Hormuz ×
“The government of Oman floated the idea of imposing tolls on ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz.”
Available evidence attributes the shipping-toll idea to Iran, not to Oman. Official U.S. remarks explicitly said it was not an Omani proposal, and multiple independent reports describe Washington warning Oman against facilitating such a plan rather than accusing Oman of originating it. Reports implying Omani involvement are weaker and do not support the claim that Oman’s government floated the idea.
“Under an emerging agreement involving Oman and Iran, the Strait of Hormuz will be opened without restrictions.”
The claim is not supported by the evidence. Available reporting describes conditional negotiations and draft traffic-management arrangements, not a concluded Oman-Iran deal to open the Strait of Hormuz without restrictions. References to no tolls or to administrative requirements that are said not to be restrictive do not amount to proof of unrestricted passage.
“Oman and Iran are attempting to establish a joint management and fee-collection system for the Strait of Hormuz.”
Iran appears to be promoting and discussing a joint Hormuz fee or service framework with Oman, but the evidence does not clearly show a mutual bilateral effort to establish it. Oman has publicly pushed back on toll claims and emphasized international law. That makes the claim directionally grounded in real talks, yet overstated in portraying a settled joint attempt at management and fee collection.
“A diplomat from a mediating country told Kan News that mediators tried to restore the situation in the Strait of Hormuz to its previous state.”
The available evidence does not verify that a diplomat from a mediating country told Kan News this. Reliable reporting confirms broader efforts to restore normal shipping conditions in the Strait of Hormuz, but none of the cited sources reproduces or independently confirms the specific Kan attribution, speaker, or wording. The claim therefore presents an unverified specific report as established fact.
“The United States warned Oman against facilitating Iranian ship tolls in the Strait of Hormuz.”
The evidence supports that Washington warned Oman not to help Iran impose Hormuz transit fees. A State Department transcript quotes Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent saying he told the Omani ambassador such facilitation was a “non-starter” and could trigger sanctions. The main caveat is wording: the issue was a proposed tolling or transit-fee scheme, not an established toll system.
“On or around March 23, 2026, U.S. President Donald Trump issued a 48-hour ultimatum to Iran demanding the full and unimpeded reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, threatening to destroy Iranian energy infrastructure if the demand was not met.”
The claim is accurate. Over fifteen independent, high-authority news outlets — including AP News, The Guardian, CBS News, Bloomberg, TIME, and PBS — confirm that Trump posted a 48-hour ultimatum on Truth Social around March 22, 2026, demanding Iran fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz and threatening to destroy Iranian power plants. The claim's use of "energy infrastructure" slightly broadens Trump's specific "power plants" language, and the exact posting date was March 21–22 (with the deadline expiring around March 23–24), but the overall claim is substantively correct.
“Donald Trump issued a 48-hour ultimatum to Iran threatening to attack Iranian power plants unless the Strait of Hormuz was fully opened.”
Multiple major, independent news outlets—including the Associated Press, CBS News, Bloomberg, The Guardian, and TIME—confirm that Donald Trump issued a 48-hour ultimatum to Iran on March 22, 2026, threatening to strike Iranian power plants unless the Strait of Hormuz was fully opened. TIME published a verbatim quote from Trump's Truth Social post. The claim accurately captures the core elements of the ultimatum, though Trump's actual language was "hit and obliterate" rather than the softer "attack."