U.S. Forces Attack Iranian Mine-Laying Ships Near the Strait of Hormuz
Source: New York Times
U.S. Forces Attack Iranian Mine-Laying Ships Near the Strait of Hormuz
A video posted by the U.S. Central Command showed munitions striking nine vessels, most of which were moored at the time. Whether any mines have been laid in Gulf waters was unclear.

Boats docked in a fishing area in the Strait of Hormuz in Musandam, Oman, earlier this month. Amr Alfiky/Reuters
By John Ismay and Julian E. Barnes
Reporting from Washington
March 10, 2026
Updated 9:33 p.m. ET
In a social media post, the United States Central Command said Tuesday evening that it had attacked 16 Iranian mine-laying vessels near the Strait of Hormuz. ... A video accompanying the post showed munitions hitting nine vessels, most of which were moored at the time of the attack.
Whether any Iranian mines have been deployed in the water since the current war began on Feb. 28 is unclear. The United States believed that Iran was preparing to mine the strait but had not begun the operation, according to an American official. Still, the preparatory efforts spooked the Trump administration, prompting the White House order to the military to strike Irans mine-laying equipment.
The Strait of Hormuz is a strategically important waterway that connects the Persian Gulf to the northern Arabian Sea. Irans southern coastline runs along the strait, and military and civilian vessels transiting through are routinely questioned by Iranian authorities via maritime radio communications when entering and exiting the gulf.
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Peter Eavis contributed reporting.
John Ismay is a reporter covering the Pentagon for The Times. He served as an explosive ordnance disposal officer in the U.S. Navy.
Julian E. Barnes covers the U.S. intelligence agencies and international security matters for The Times. He has written about security issues for more than two decades.
Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/10/world/middleeast/iran-mines-strait-of-hormuz.html
https://www.nytimes.com/by/john-ismay
https://www.nytimes.com/by/julian-e-barnes
mahatmakanejeeves
(69,283 posts)The Associated Press
March 10, 2026, 9:43 PM
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) The U.S. said it took out more than a dozen mine-laying Iranian vessels Tuesday, and the Islamic Republic vowed to block the regions oil exports, saying it would not allow even a single liter to be shipped to its enemies.
As concerns grew about the wars effect on a strategic waterway, the American military said it destroyed 16 minelayers, though President Donald Trump said in social media posts that there were no reports of Iran planting explosives in the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the worlds oil is shipped.
The American military released the figure, along with unclassified footage of some of the vessels, after Trump threatened to hit Iran at a level never seen before if the country failed to immediately remove any mines it might have deployed in the channel.
Both sides sharpened their rhetoric as the war entered its 11th day. U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth promised the most intense strikes yet while the Pentagon detailed the broader toll of injuries sustained by U.S. troops.
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Roy Rolling
(7,592 posts)I dont believe a word from these boys playing army with live ammunition. Putting aside the issue of existence, a God would tell us to pray for the POTUS, Psalm 109:8
If you know what I mean.
And if you dont think theyve rigged the world, I just spent an hour battling with ChatGPT and Claude over creating a biblically-themed meme for the current POTUS with Psalm 109:8 but they both refused. But they agreed to create a meme implying Trump is a truthful person
which is a lie.
I dont fucking care anymore.
Maybe an acronym? IDFCA.
AZJonnie
(3,590 posts)The verse reads: "Let his days be few; and let another take his office."
Taken alone, it sounds like a mild political wish. But the context is the problem. The very next verses (109
Why it's a known political dog whistle
This verse has a specific documented history as a political weapon:
It went viral as an "Obama prayer" starting in 2009, appearing on bumper stickers and merchandise; critics immediately noted that the verse appearing benign ("let another take his office" ) was inseparable from its surrounding death-wish context.
Georgia GOP Senator David Perdue used it at the Faith & Freedom Coalition in 2016 as a "prayer for Obama," causing a media firestorm.
Since 2025 it has re-emerged in anti-Trump memes using the exact same framing.
Why an AI would decline
The refusal isn't about the Bible or Trump specifically. The issue is that Psalm 109:8 has a well-documented history as a coded call for a sitting president's death, exploiting the surrounding death-curse context while maintaining plausible deniability via the single innocuous-sounding verse. Creating a meme explicitly deploying that against the current presidentregardless of who it iscrosses into content that any responsible AI should decline, because the whole point of the meme format is to leverage that coded threat
Sounds, I dunno, vaguely socially responsible, as long as it would also refuse to do so for other POTUS's as well, which I'd imagine it probably would