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World of Software > Gaming > A superyacht has just crossed Hormuz before the astonished gaze of the US and Iran. Its flag has confirmed that mines are not for everyone
Gaming

A superyacht has just crossed Hormuz before the astonished gaze of the US and Iran. Its flag has confirmed that mines are not for everyone

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Last updated: 2026/04/29 at 5:27 AM
News Room Published 29 April 2026
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A superyacht has just crossed Hormuz before the astonished gaze of the US and Iran. Its flag has confirmed that mines are not for everyone
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In 2019, during one of the highest recent tensions in the Persian Gulf, several marine insurers raised their premiums so much that some shipowners opted to keep their ships anchored for weeks rather than cross certain routes considered too dangerous. In parallel, other ships continued sailing with relative normality thanks to apparently minor details such as their registration or the documentation they carried, making it clear that, even in times of greatest uncertainty, not all ships play by the same rules.

A strategic step converted into a global funnel. We have been counting it. The Strait of Hormuz, through which about a fifth of the world’s oil normally circulates, has become one of the most tense points on the planet after the outbreak of the conflict between the United States, Israel and Iran, with traffic plummeting from more than 130 ships a day to just a few dozen and hundreds of ships trapped waiting for safe conditions.

The situation has skyrocketed energy prices and generated a domino effect in global trade, while Tehran demands permits to cross and Washington threatens to intercept certain movements. In this scenario, crossing this bottleneck has become an operation fraught with military, legal and economic risks.

Or maybe not so much.

A superyacht that defies the blockade. Because in the midst of that collapse, the Norda luxury superyacht valued at just over $500 million and linked to Russian oligarch Alexei Mordashov, achieved what very few have achieved in recent weeks: crossing Hormuz from Dubai to Oman without incident.

With more than 140 meters in length, several decks, a swimming pool, heliports and even a convertible hangar, its journey not only contrasts with the general paralysis of maritime traffic, but also makes it a striking anomaly in an environment where even large oil tankers prefer not to risk it. Its route, monitored in real time, followed routes that other ships have used with some type of coordination in the area, although without official confirmation of permits.

Alexey Mordashov 2018
Alexey Mordashov 2018

Alexey Mordashov

The invisible key. Possibly, the most revealing element of this episode is not in the luxury of the ship, but in how it managed to pass without being stopped or attacked, in a context where any ship can become a target.

Everything indicates that it achieved this with a combination of factors: not heading to Iranian ports (which would place it outside the direct focus of the US blockade), navigating through corridors tolerated by Iran and, above all, operating under a diffuse legal structure where formal ownership does not entirely coincide with real ownership. In other words, in an environment where each movement is interpreted as a political signal, the flag, the chosen route and the legal ambiguity act as a kind of tacit safe conduct that allows moving between red lines without completely crossing them.

Geopolitics, sanctions and alliances in the background. Of course, the journey of Nord It cannot be understood without the political background that surrounds it, marked by the close relationship between Russia and Iran and by the fact that Vladimir Putin maintains strategic support for Tehran in the midst of an escalation with the West.

Mordashov, one of the richest men in Russia and sanctioned by the United States and the European Union since the invasion of Ukraine, has already seen other assets seized, which has led many oligarchs to move their assets to safer jurisdictions. In this context, the passage of the yacht through Hormuz also becomes a sign of the extent to which certain networks of power and alliances can influence what, in theory, should be a total blockade.

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A symptom of how conflicts work. Beyond the anecdote, the episode reflects an increasingly common dynamic in contemporary conflicts: while great powers impose restrictions and threats, there are always gray spaces where specific actors manage to move thanks to combinations of diplomacy, crossed interests and legal loopholes.

The fact that a luxury superyacht can cross one of the most dangerous points on the planet in the midst of a crisis, while hundreds of ships remain immobilized and frightened by mines and drones in the surrounding area, illustrates how power is not only measured in military capacity, but also in the ability to browse (literally and figuratively) between rules that are not always applied uniformly.

Image | NASA, Wolfgang Fricke

In | The US resurrected the “right of prey” to capture a ship from China: the problem is that China has taken note

In | Ukraine taught how to use drones. Iran has gone one step further: turning them into a crusher for US radars and bases

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