[ENCRYPTED REPORT: SIPHONED TRUTH]

I. PUBLIC NARRATIVE
US officials, including SecDef Hegseth and CENTCOM, claimed the US military was 'defensive,' 'temporary,' and in effective control of the Strait of Hormuz. Trump called his blockade 'amazing' and said nobody was going to challenge it. The administration positioned the Hormuz operation as protecting global shipping. AIS and UK Maritime Trade Operations data tells a different story: a cargo vessel was struck by an unidentified projectile inside the Strait on May 5-6, a second cargo ship was hit May 5, and Iran separately seized a tanker after it turned off its AIS tracker near Hormuz on May 8.
II. TELEMETRY FEED
- UKMTO advisory May 5-6: cargo vessel struck by projectile inside the Strait of Hormuz
- UKMTO advisory May 5: second cargo ship hit by projectile near Strait
- Ocean Koi tanker seizure (May 8): Iran seized vessel after AIS turned off near Hormuz — 1.9M barrels, approximately 200 million dollars
- CENTCOM public denial: denied Iran struck a US Navy vessel — Iran simultaneously denied sinking Iranian boats — both denied something
- US offer to escort commercial ships through: implicit admission that current posture doesn't secure shipping lanes
- Multiple small craft attacks on commercial ships near Strait reported in same 72-hour window
- Physical evidence (AIS tracks, UKMTO advisories) directly contradicts 'control' narrative
III. ADVERSARIAL ANALYSIS
The dissonance between official statements and raw maritime telemetry is not a communication problem — it's an operational credibility problem. Hegseth's 'defensive and temporary' framing against the projectile strike data suggests either deception about operational failure or a deliberate mismatch between public posture and actual capability. The dual denial — CENTCOM and Tehran both denying — creates a credibility vacuum where neither statement can be fully believed.
IV. THE VERDICT
[SIPHONED VERDICT]: The 'control' narrative collapsed in real time. In 72 hours, three commercial vessels were struck or seized, a tanker was taken, and small craft attacks were reported — all while the Pentagon maintained it had effective control of the Strait. Either the control never existed, or it was lost and the statement wasn't updated.
V. SOURCE TELEMETRY
Data cross-referenced from: AIS ship tracking (MarineTraffic/OpenSeaMap), OpenSky Network flight telemetry, NASA FIRMS fire hotspot data, EIA energy stock reports, EIA petroleum status reports, Reuters/House Reuters energy coverage, Platts commodity benchmarks, State Department press briefings, CENTCOM public statements, and public aviation databases.