US Marines boarded and inspected a massive Iranian oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman on July 16, making one of the most visible shows of force yet in the ongoing naval blockade of Iran’s ports. The vessel, the M/T Wen Yao, is a Very Large Crude Carrier with roughly 299,000 deadweight tonnage, enough capacity to haul over two million barrels of crude oil. It has been on the US Treasury Department’s sanctions list since October 2024.

The boarding was carried out by Marines from the 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit, according to US Central Command. CENTCOM also reported that US forces had redirected three commercial vessels attempting to breach the blockade and disabled one ship for non-compliance.

What the blockade actually looks like

The Wen Yao isn’t some obscure fishing trawler. It’s a supertanker flagged to Iran and linked to the National Iranian Oil Company, which is why the Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned it in the first place. The verification boarding was designed to assess whether the vessel was complying with international sanctions targeting Iranian crude shipments.

The Gulf of Oman sits at the mouth of the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply passes on any given day.