Pankaj Khanna, the chief executive of Heidmar Maritime Holdings, knows what it’s like to be stranded at sea in a war zone. Long before he became a shipping executive, he was a seafarer himself, a crew member on a ship during the Persian Gulf war of 1991 as a Scud missile flew overhead. He recalled the paralyzing fear of some seafarers on board.
Today, the stress on the roughly 11,000 stranded sailors in the Persian Gulf may be even greater. Seafarers now have internet access and are often watching livestreams of attacks happening around them, while also seeing explosions from their ship decks.
“The fact that they are sitting on board the ships with real-time information — it is psychologically very traumatic,” said Mr. Khanna, 55.
Three commercial vessels have been hit by U.S. forces this week. One of the strikes killed three people, bringing the number of seafarers killed since the start of the war to 14. All told, there have been 46 attacks on international ships in and around the Strait of Hormuz since Feb. 28, most by Iran and some by the United States.
Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/12/business/strait-hormuz-ships-iran.html