British Prime Minister Keir Starmer says the UK is working with allies on a “viable” plan to reopen the Strait of Hormuz but has ruled out any NATO led mission.
He said the goal is to restore freedom of navigation in the vital oil route without dragging Britain into a wider Middle East war.
Speaking at a Downing Street press conference, Starmer revealed he had discussed the crisis with US President Donald Trump and several European leaders.
He explained that the UK is coordinating with European partners, Gulf countries and the United States on a collective response.
Starmer stressed that any operation to secure shipping lanes will not be under the NATO umbrella and has “never been envisioned” as a NATO mission.
Instead, he said it would likely involve a broader coalition that includes regional partners most directly affected by Iran’s actions.
Pressed about Trump’s public calls for allies to send warships, Starmer refused to confirm whether Britain would deploy additional Royal Navy vessels.
He insisted that no final decision had been taken and that any move must be carefully weighed to avoid escalation.
The Prime Minister also announced domestic measures to ease the impact of surging oil and gas prices on UK households.
These include a legal direction requiring energy companies to pass on existing policy savings and a £53 million support package targeted at vulnerable heating oil users.
Starmer repeated that Britain will “not be drawn into the wider war” and will act in line with international law.
He said the focus is on de escalation, protecting commercial shipping and stabilising global markets which have been rattled by the Iran conflict.
Downing Street earlier said Starmer and the leaders of Germany and Italy agreed on the “vital importance of freedom of navigation” in the strait.
They also pledged to work closely together in the coming days in the face of continuing Iranian threats to tanker traffic.
Analysts note that many NATO members are wary of Trump’s pressure to open the strait by force and prefer a more limited, coalition based approach.
They warn that any miscalculation in Hormuz could further inflame the conflict and send energy prices even higher.
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