EXPLAINERBandar Abbas, which the US has targeted multiple times, occupies a strategically sensitive position in the
Strait of Hormuz.A boat is seen in the Gulf off
Bandar Abbas,
Iran, as shipping has been mostly stopped through the
Strait of Hormuz since the outbreak of the
US-Israel war on
Iran [File: Majid Saeedi/Getty Images]Published On 28 May 2026The
United States has carried out strikes near
Bandar Abbas, the second attack in less than a week on
Iran’s strategically important port city, escalating tensions around the
Strait of Hormuz despite a fragile ceasefire that has been in place between
Washington and
Tehran since April 8.Reuters and The Associated Press, quoting unnamed US officials, reported that US forces shot down four
Iranian drones and struck a ground control station for drones on Wednesday in
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Bandar Abbas on Tuesday.
Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs accused
Washington of violating the ceasefire through “aggressive acts” in
Hormozgan province, where the port city is located.The semiofficial Iranian news agency Tasnim also reported that Iranian forces had fired on an “American airbase” in the region in response to a US attack near
Bandar Abbas.The escalation came after US President
Donald Trump said during a cabinet meeting in
Washington, DC, on Wednesday that “nobody’s going to control” the
Strait of Hormuz as he spoke about ongoing negotiations between
Tehran and
Washington.
Bandar Abbas, home to key Iranian naval forces, occupies one of the most strategically sensitive positions in the Gulf. Its location on the
Strait of Hormuz has made it central to both
Iran’s military position and the wider confrontation with the US. Here is what we know:Where is
Bandar Abbas?
Bandar Abbas lies on
Iran’s southern coast, on the northern side of the
Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway linking the Gulf to the
Gulf of Oman and
Arabian Sea.The city, which had a population of more than 526,000 people at the time of
Iran’s 2016 census, sits roughly 60km to 70km (35 to 45 miles) north of the strait’s narrowest point.Its position gives
Iran oversight of one of the world’s most important shipping lanes. About one-fifth of global oil and gas supplies transit through the
Strait of Hormuz during peacetime.Since the ceasefire was announced on April 8,
Iran has continued to control shipping through the
Strait of Hormuz while US forces have imposed a blockade on Iranian ports.What is the military significance of
Bandar Abbas?
Bandar Abbas is the headquarters of both
Iran’s conventional navy and the naval arm of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).The conventional navy has used it as its base since 1977 when
Iran moved much of its fleet from Khorramshahr at the western edge of
Iran’s Gulf coastline, to
Bandar Abbas, transforming the city into the country’s main southern naval command centre.According to the Middle East Institute, the IRGC navy later relocated its headquarters from
Tehran to
Bandar Abbas to improve operational control along the
Strait of Hormuz.Although Trump and Israeli officials claimed
Iran’s naval capabilities have been heavily damaged in their recent attacks,
Tehran still maintains a fleet of fast attack boats operated by the IRGC navy.The vessels are designed for “swarm” tactics and are being used against commercial ships that do not have authorisation from
Iran to sail through the narrow
Strait of Hormuz. They were used recently against two Indian ships and two foreign container vessels, the Panama-flagged MSC Francesca and the Liberian-flagged Epaminondas, which
Iran said had not been given approval to transit the waterway.(Al Jazeera)Why is
Bandar Abbas important to
Iran’s economy?The
Strait of Hormuz is not just a military chokepoint but also an economic lifeline.Analysts estimated that more than 90 percent of Iranian crude shipments transit through the strait.That makes
Bandar Abbas and nearby Gulf infrastructure critical to government revenues, including the trade networks that help
Iran circumvent sanctions, particularly by exporting oil to China.Why are the US attacks significant?Samir Puri, a visiting lecturer in war studies at King’s College London, told Al Jazeera the ceasefire has not yet formally collapsed despite these latest exchanges of fire.He described those incidents as “limited” compared with strikes carried out before April 8. These attacks can be characterised as “tit-for-tat military-to-military engagements rather than attacks on infrastructure or widespread destruction en masse”, he said.“What the US military is attempting to do is explore whether it can physically deny the IRGC and
Iran the ability to control the
Strait of Hormuz,” he said.“
Iran, of course, wants to show it cannot be denied that capability.”What does this mean for peace negotiations?Diplomatic and military operations are unfolding simultaneously as
Iran and the US have exchanged a volley of proposals and counterproposals for peace since the ceasefire began.“This is unfolding on parallel tracks. There is a military track and a negotiating track all unfolding at the same time,” Puri said. These limited strikes are, therefore, ultimately being launched as part of the negotiations, he said.“The negotiators can only present the leverage they have from the field of battle. Is the US going to put itself into a position in which it can say to Iranian negotiators that they do not control the
Strait of Hormuz? Because if you try to amass forces around
Bandar Abbas and launch attacks from that coastal area, we can strike back.“But
Iran will not want to be pushed into that position and will want to say it retains the ability to strike shipping and US bases hosted by Gulf allies and partners. So that’s the duality that’s unfolding right now.”Puri said both
Washington and
Tehran still appeared to have incentives to continue mediation but the two sides are approaching negotiations with very different objectives.“Trump and the US administration want to impose a victor’s peace on
Iran.
Iran’s reading of the same script that they’re being handed is very different, and
Iran probably wants to stretch out these negotiations for as long as possible without conceding.”“So again, you end up in a situation that wars elsewhere have seen – negotiations without an endpoint or even the promise of an endpoint but still an incentive for both parties to participate, for now.”