The Strait of Hormuz Blunder: How Iran Missing Mine Maps, are Accidentally Keeping the Strait Closed That’s the mess in the Strait of Hormuz right now. Back in early 2026, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard rushed to turn this narrow waterway into a massive minefield. According to the New York Times, it wasn’t a strategic masterstroke; it was pure panic. Under pressure, IRGC teams were just throwing explosives overboard. They were so focused on blocking Western warships that they didn’t bother to record GPS coordinates or lay them in any kind of traceable pattern. They didn’t just lock the door; they welded it shut and tossed the blueprints. Then, nature made it worse .
The currents in the Strait are brutal. Many of these mines have snapped their anchors and started wandering. We’re talking about “Ghost Mines”—drifting explosives turning the world’s most important shipping lane into a game of Russian Roulette. You could sweep a path today, and a mine could float right back into it tomorrow. The result? About 20% of the world’s oil is now trapped behind a wall that Iran built but can’t take down. They’ve managed to start a fire, but they’ve lost the map to the fire hydrants. But the IRGC just issued a new warning: if you want safe passage, it’s going to cost you a $2 million toll—payable only in crypto.