Three sailors with British connections are missing and presumed dead after a US military strike triggered a firestorm in the Gulf of Oman, sources confirm. The attack, which targeted what the Pentagon called an 'unidentified hostile vessel' early this morning, has left a trail of chaos and unanswered questions.
Documents obtained by this newsroom show the vessel was registered to a shell company in the Cayman Islands, with beneficial ownership tracing back to a London-based investment firm. The missing men: a former Royal Navy petty officer from Portsmouth, a merchant seaman from Liverpool, and a dual-national engineer who lived in Surrey.
US Central Command insists the strike was justified, claiming the vessel was 'acting suspiciously' and posed a threat to commercial shipping. But leaked internal communications from the British Foreign Office suggest diplomats were caught off guard. 'We were not consulted. This was a unilateral action,' a senior official wrote in a memo marked 'secret'.
The Gulf of Oman is a volatile waterway. Tankers carrying a fifth of the world's oil pass through its narrow straits. Every misstep here echoes in boardrooms and intelligence bunkers from London to Tehran. And this misstep could be catastrophic.
I spent six hours on the phone with a retired intelligence officer who worked the Gulf beat for two decades. 'The Americans have been trigger-happy since the tanker attacks last year,' he said. 'But this is different. This is direct. They hit a vessel with British nationals on board. That will test the so-called special relationship.'
The Foreign Office has not confirmed the men's identities. A spokesperson issued a terse statement: 'We are aware of reports of missing British nationals and are urgently seeking further information from our allies.' Allies. That word stings when your own people are in the line of fire.
Meanwhile, Iranian state media is screaming 'act of war'. Their navy has been deployed to the area. A source in the Iranian embassy in London told me they are 'reviewing options'. Options in diplomatic speak usually means retaliation.
The missing men's families have not been informed. I know this because I called the Portsmouth address listed on the former sailor's last known employment record. A woman answered. She started crying when I asked if he was home. 'They told me he was on a routine cargo run,' she whispered. 'They told me not to worry.'
This story is far from over. I have seen the movement logs from the vessel's final hours. They show erratic course changes, as if trying to evade something. I have seen an email from a British intelligence liaison expressing 'deep concern' about the US rules of engagement. And I have a source who claims the vessel was carrying something more than cargo. Something that explains why the Americans were so eager to sink it and why the British are so quiet.
For now, three families wait. And a Gulf that was already a powder keg burns a little hotter.








