Iran and Oman open joint committee on the Strait of Hormuz, a corridor at the centre of global energy
Tehran and Muscat have convened the first session of a joint committee on the Strait of Hormuz, putting two of the chokepoint's principal shoreline states in the formal driving seat of corridor governance.

Iran and Oman convened the first meeting of a joint committee on the Strait of Hormuz on 29 June 2026, according to Iranian and Beirut-based regional outlets, putting two of the world's most consequential energy chokepoint states in formal control of a negotiating track that has, until now, been handled almost exclusively by Western-allied navies and a narrow band of Gulf monarchies. The move is small in surface detail and large in what it gestures at: a possible renegotiation of who writes the operating rules of the corridor through which roughly a fifth of seaborne crude passes each day.
The committee, announced by Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal and International Affairs Kazem Gharibabadi alongside Oman's Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, is the first institutional outcome of a bilateral track that has been quietly thickening since mid-2025. It matters less for what it will deliver on day one and more for whose signature ends up on the rules of passage when the next crisis hits.
What was actually agreed
According to Tehran's official IRNA English service and the Beirut-based regional outlet The Cradle, the meeting covered the legal framework for transit, maritime safety cooperation, and the division of regulatory authority between the two shoreline states. No joint communiqué has been released; both wire reports describe the session as the opening of an institutional process rather than the conclusion of one.
Gharibabadi's role is significant. He is not a foreign-policy generalist; he is the Iranian foreign ministry's lead on the legal file around sanctions, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, and the hostage-prisoner exchanges that have punctuated the past two years. That he is the named face of this committee signals Tehran intends to lead with its lawyers, not its naval officers. Oman, for its part, has historically played the role of discreet interlocutor — the back channel between Tehran and Washington, the venue for quiet releases, the host of intra-GCC talks that never quite reached the public record. Bringing that institutional muscle into a formal Hormuz process gives Muscat a domestic stake it has historically avoided.
The reported agenda points — transit rules, search-and-rescue coordination, environmental protocols — are precisely the kind of technical work that does not require great-power permission. They are also the kind of technical work that, once normalised bilaterally, becomes very hard for outside navies to walk back.
The corridor the West thought it owned
For three decades the operating assumption in Western defence ministries and oil majors was that the Strait of Hormuz is governed, in practice, by the United States Fifth Fleet, the United Kingdom's standing naval presence in the Gulf, and the GCC monarchies that sit on the southern shore. Iran is the revisionist power; everyone else is the status-quo power. That framing has never quite matched the geography — Iran and Oman hold the northern and southern approaches to the strait, and Omani territory at Musandam juts into the southern shipping lane — but it has matched the institutional architecture, which has been anchored at the US Navy's Bahrain headquarters and in the International Maritime Organisation's London secretariat.
A bilateral Tehran–Muscat committee does not displace any of that. It does, however, create a parallel track through which rules of the road can be negotiated, modified, and recognised by other littoral states — Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Iraq, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait — without those changes needing to clear Washington or Whitehall first. The precedent matters more than the substance: once two of the three principal shoreline states have a standing committee, the case for treating the strait as an exclusively Western-patrolled corridor becomes harder to argue in writing.
The Global South read
Reporting from Tehran and Beirut reads the move as part of a broader pattern: regional powers reorganising security architecture on their own terms, in their own timeframes, with their own legal templates. IRNA's framing positions the committee as a contribution to maritime stability and a counterweight to extra-regional militarisation. The Cradle's framing goes further, presenting the committee as evidence that the Gulf is moving from a US-led security order toward a multipolar arrangement in which shoreline states are sovereign equals of outside navies rather than their dependents.
Both framings have a case. The Western counter-reading — that Tehran uses bilateral processes to normalise a maritime posture from which it can coerce Gulf shipping at will — is also not unfounded. Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy has built a fast-boat and mines capability explicitly designed to make the strait untenable for an adversary in wartime; the existence of a legal committee does not retire that capability. What the committee does retire is the assumption that any change to corridor governance has to be rubber-stamped by a Western admiral.
The honest reading sits between the two: the move is simultaneously a sovereignty claim and a stability instrument, and which of those predominates will depend on whether the next crisis in the Gulf gets handled at the committee table or at sea.
Stakes and the next quarter
For OPEC+ producers on both shores, the relevant question is whether the committee becomes a venue for transit-fee discussions, security-of-supply guarantees, or insurance-rating conversations. All three would shift revenue and risk away from the current arrangement, in which Lloyd's of London and the Joint Maritime Information Centre in Dubai set the de facto pricing of safe passage. None of those outcomes is in the public reporting yet. What is in the reporting is a process that creates a standing room for them.
For outside powers, the near-term implication is that any attempt to coordinate a multilateral Hormuz posture — a US–UK–EU convoy regime, a French-led escort mission, a Japanese or Korean naval redeployment — will now have to factor in a Tehran–Muscat bilateral track that can either amplify or quietly undercut it. For oil markets, the most useful indicator to watch is not the price of the front-month future, which has not moved on the announcement, but the volume of Iranian crude that clears the strait under bilateral overflight-and-transit arrangements in Q3. A meaningful shift in that volume would tell traders that the corridor's operating system is being rewritten in practice, not just on paper.
The sources do not specify the committee's meeting cadence, its secretariat, or whether any third state will be invited to observe. Those details will determine whether this is a working institution or a declaratory one. For now, what is on the record is enough to say the conversation about who governs the strait is no longer one the West gets to have by itself.
Desk note: Monexus is framing this as a procedural shift in corridor governance rather than as a confrontation. Wire coverage of the announcement has been limited to regional outlets; this article treats the IRNA and The Cradle reports as primary source material on Tehran's stated intent and supplements them with general reference material on the strait's legal status. Readers should expect more substantive detail once either government publishes a communiqué or convenes a second session.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/Irna_en
- https://t.me/thecradlemedia
- https://t.me/TheCradleMedia
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strait_of_Hormuz
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazem_Gharibabadi
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Maritime_Organization