Qatar has warned that any closure of the Strait of Hormuz constitutes a flagrant violation of international law that endangers global energy and food supply chains, calling for an immediate halt to Iranian attacks on Gulf states and urged all parties to return to the negotiating table.
Speaking at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs' weekly media briefing Tuesday, Advisor to the Prime Minister and Official Spokesperson Dr Majed bin Mohamed al-Ansari described the strait's closure as "a very dangerous precedent that will harm all and undermine the world security of energy and food supplies," stressing that the waterway — unlike the Suez or Panama canals — belongs to no single nation and must remain open to international navigation as it has been for centuries.
Al-Ansari confirmed that two Qatari tankers remain stranded and unable to transit the strait, and said Qatar's immediate priority is the safety and security of their crew members.
On Qatar's diplomatic posture, he drew a clear distinction between support for mediation and direct engagement with Iran. "We are not a party to this war, but we are in daily contact with key actors to reduce escalation," he said.
"We are not engaged in mediation and are focused on defending our sovereignty, but we support Pakistan's efforts."
Regarding a recent call between Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and His Excellency the Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim al-Thani, al-Ansari said the prime minister strongly condemned and rejected continued Iranian attacks on Qatar and neighbouring countries, stressing the need to stop them immediately as they were "completely unjustifiable and unacceptable."
He warned that targeting civilian infrastructure — particularly energy, water and key installations — served no-one's interests, including Iran's own. "It undermines the livelihoods of the people, harms the environment and would lead to destabilising the region," he said.
On the question of Iran potentially imposing transit fees on vessels crossing the strait, al-Ansari said it was premature to engage with that scenario. The immediate priorities, he stressed, were halting the attacks, guaranteeing free and safe navigation, and protecting global supply chains.
He said GCC states were in continuous coordination at the leadership level and that their defence establishments remained in close contact to maintain collective security. "Since the start of this war, many red lines have been crossed. We call on all parties to halt escalation, which is causing harm to all," he said, adding that any future agreement must rest on a clear international framework with regional states included as integral parties — not afterthoughts.
He underlined that any durable solution must address the threat to maritime navigation as a non-negotiable element. No single party, he said, should retain the ability to close the strait or use that threat as leverage in regional dealings without a clear deterrent in place.
Al-Ansari described the crisis as no longer merely regional but a global challenge affecting international economic stability and security, warning that the window for a negotiated settlement was narrowing in light of deadlines set by the United States for an agreement with Iran.
Qatar, he reiterated, had been calling for de-escalation since 2023 and remained committed to a political resolution. "The solution will always be through the negotiation table, not war," he said. "Whoever wants peace in the region must start with the option of peace — not with war, with the expectation that it will lead to peace."
On the Palestinian front, al-Ansari renewed Qatar's condemnation of continued Israeli incursions into the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, intensified military operations in the West Bank and ongoing attacks on Gaza. He warned that Israel — itself a party to the wider conflict — was exploiting international preoccupation with the war to alter the status quo on the ground, calling such attempts "shameful" and a bid to circumvent international law and long-standing agreements.
Any future regional security architecture, he concluded, must be built on co-operation, consensus and international guarantees — and must be driven first by the priorities of the region's own peoples.