Since the first tanker pushed through it, the Strait of Hormuz has been treated as a static math problem. You tallied the hulls, weighed the warheads and assumed you knew the score. If you could map the Fifth Fleetâs tonnage against the IRGCâs mine density, you had a working theory on who held the leverage and what a barrel of crude ought to cost. For decades, we looked at those 21 miles of water and saw a cage made of steel.
That logic is now an artifact. The âgrey hullâ era of deterrence didnât end with a kinetic explosion. It just quietly stopped being the thing that mattered. Whatâs happening in the Gulf isnât a traditional naval confrontation. Itâs the violent, accelerating breakdown of a global system that destroyers arenât equipped to target.
[A note on sourcing: Several of the data points below come from Windward, whose CEO co-authored this piece, and from the maritime data sector in which co-author Erik Bethelâs firm, Mare Liberum, is an active investor. We have flagged these instances and stand behind the underlying figures, which are corroborated by satellite and open-source intelligence. Readers should weigh that context accordingly.]
Run the numbers. When U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran kicked off on February 28, traffic through the worldâs most critical oil artery didnât just slow â it cratered by 97% in a single week, according to Windwardâs Q1 2026 shipping risk report. Upwards of 800 ships were left idling west of the chokepoint, effectively paralyzed. Of the 142.5 million barrels loaded in March, a staggering 128 million never cleared the gap. By late April, with the ceasefire fraying and tankers still taking hits mid-transit, the Strait is, in the authorsâ assessment, closed to commercial traffic.
The missiles and drones make for good headlines, but theyâre a distraction. The real story is that the Strait has gone dark. Not in some poetic sense, but literally. The Automatic Identification System (AIS) â the network thatâs supposed to be the âgold standardâ for commercial tracking â has stopped telling the truth.
AIS was designed in the 1990s as a collision-avoidance tool, so ships wouldnât run into each other in fog or at night. It has since become the backbone of how the world sees maritime trade: insurers, regulators, commodities desks, port authorities and central banks all price, enforce and plan against the signals flowing out of shipsâ transponders. The catch is that AIS is self-reported. The ship tells the world where it is and who it is, and the world believes it. There is no independent verification baked into the system. In peacetime, that works, because lying serves no one. In Hormuz right now, it is being weaponized.
Ships are vanishing into digital black holes only to materialize hours later on the other side of Hormuz with the transit completed in total silence. On April 21, Windwardâs platform identified 296 vessels off Bandar Abbas. Of these, only 74 were transmitting AIS signals â a cooperative rate of roughly 25%.
Others are caught in the crossfire of GPS spoofing attacks â fake satellite signals, broadcast from shore, that fool a shipâs navigation into thinking itâs somewhere it isnât. The result is a fleet of tankers whose screens show them circling inland airports or drifting across the Iranian desert. Windward identified at least 30 jamming clusters across Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the UAE, Qatar, Oman and Iran. Some have gone further, broadcasting the identity numbers of hulls that were scrapped years ago. These are zombie ships â very real tankers operating under the digital signatures of vessels that no longer exist.
Even the destination fields, meant to tell port authorities where a hull is headed, have been repurposed into desperate pleas. Instead of a port of call, the screens read: âIndia Ship, India Crew.â âChina Owner and All Crew.â Itâs not data anymore; itâs a prayer. Please donât shoot.
Data suggest AIS is now underreporting Hormuz traffic by half. In Q1 alone, nearly a million GPS jamming incidents hit over 1,100 vessels. Satellite imagery recently caught seven VLCCs â 14 million barrels of capacity â off Iranâs coast with zero digital footprint. Iran claims 11 million barrels exported during a blockade where commercial feeds show a graveyard. Both are true. That is the problem.
Hereâs why this should worry anyone whose job depends on a functioning global economy. Our entire maritime architecture is built on the naive hope that data is honest. Itâs a costly delusion. Insurers are now benchmarking war-risk premiums against vessel tracks that are often little more than digital fiction â and in the Strait, those premiums havenât just risen, theyâve tripled, adding a $250,000 surcharge to every supertanker transit. But insurance is just the most visible edge of it. Commodity traders price crude on the same feeds. OFAC enforces sanctions on them. Refiners in Asia schedule deliveries against them. Central banks fold them into inflation models. Pull the thread and a surprising amount of the worldâs financial plumbing ties back to satellite signals from ships that, at the moment, are lying about where they are.
The shadow fleet â roughly 2,100 tankers already seasoned in sanctions-dodging â has spent years rehearsing for this. But the scale has shifted. Selective invisibility isnât just a niche trick for moving illicit crude anymore; it is now the ambient condition of the worldâs busiest oil corridor.
This isnât a temporary spike to wait out. When the data signal itself is compromised, youâre looking at a permanent tax on everything downstream â from charter rates to asset values and insurability. The smart money is fusing AIS with satellite and behavioral analytics to find the truth. The rest are flying on instruments, unaware that the gauges are lying to them.
The bigger implication for governments is overdue: Maritime data is no longer a commercial nicety â it is critical infrastructure. When a fifth of the worldâs oil moves through a digital blind spot, awareness must be funded and defended accordingly.
Three shifts are required:
1. Abandon AIS as âGround Truthâ:Â Stop treating a 1990s collision-avoidance tool as wartime intelligence. Cross-validating with satellite, radar, and behavioral patterns must be the baseline, not a premium add-on.
2. Shift Verification Upstream:Â The burden shouldnât fall on the port that catches a fraud. Flag registries and insurers must bear the cost of legitimacy. If a flag state canât track its own fleet, it shouldnât be a flag state.
3. Treat Spoofing as a Cyberattack:Â A âzombieâ ID is a forged credential; a spoofed GPS signal is reckless endangerment. We have frameworks for digital intrusions â salt water shouldnât be a loophole.
The ships in Hormuz that matter most right now are the ones nobody can see. Until that changes, every risk model touching the worldâs most important waterway â a London underwriterâs premium, a Tokyo refinerâs hedge, a Treasury sanctions package â is being built on data that has quietly stopped telling the truth.
The missiles make the news. The silent transponders are the crisis.
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This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
