Merz signals German minesweepers could secure the Strait of Hormuz
With a US–Iran framework deal, Berlin readies the Bundeswehr — under three conditions
Summary
Friedrich Merz on 15 June 2026 welcomed a United States–Iran framework agreement as a breakthrough, and Germany — with France, the UK and Italy — declared itself "determined" to help reopen shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. The Bundeswehr's mine-hunting squadron in Kiel is preparing for a possible operation, with a reported leave-freeze for crews. Merz set three conditions for German participation: the war must end, there must be a legal basis plus a Bundestag mandate, and a viable overall political-military strategy. The move is the security counterpart to the Trump signs the US–Iran deal at Macron's Versailles dinner and the US and Iran sign 14-point memorandum to end the war, aimed at stabilising the chokepoint behind the largest oil supply disruption on record.
By the numbers
- 15 June 2026 — Merz's welcome for the framework deal.
- 3 — preconditions for German participation.
- 4 — European states (Germany, France, UK, Italy) backing the reopening.
- Kiel — home base of the mine-hunting squadron put on standby.
Why it matters
A German naval mission in the Gulf would be a significant out-of-area deployment, signalling Europe stepping into a security role the US once owned. Merz's insistence on a Bundestag mandate keeps it conditional — and tethered to whether the fragile Iran framework actually holds.
What to watch
- Whether the war's formal end triggers a Bundestag mandate request.
- The legal basis Berlin settles on for the mission.
- Whether minesweepers actually deploy, and under whose command.