Maritime monitoring firm TankerTrackers responded to Iranian regime media claims that a vessel had “run aground” after sailing outside a route designated by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), stating that the ship is part of the “Shamkhani smuggling network” fleet.
The company, which monitors maritime traffic, particularly the so-called “shadow fleet,” wrote on X on July 1: “This is ARISTA (9348493). She is Comoros-flagged (as far as being “foreign” goes) but is part of Iran’s Shamkhani network. ARISTA has been under US OFAC sanctions since last summer.”
Ahh, so it's THIS vessel. This is ARISTA (9348493). She is Comoros-flagged (as far as being "foreign" goes) but is part of Iran's Shamkhani network. ARISTA has been under US OFAC sanctions since last summer. She's actually been stuck in this same spot since mid-March 2026; at… https://t.co/tqqKnos5mt
— TankerTrackers.com, Inc. (@TankerTrackers) July 1, 2026
According to TankerTrackers, the ARISTA has been under sanctions by the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) since last summer and has effectively been stranded and grounded in Iranian territorial waters north of Hormuz Island since early April 2026.
Iranian regime state television claimed in a report on Wednesday, July 1, that a vessel traveling outside the designated route in the Strait of Hormuz had run aground.
The state television reporter, who presented the report in a dramatic tone, claimed the vessel was a foreign container ship that became grounded after entering shallow waters along its chosen route, preventing it from continuing its voyage.
The reporter further claimed that the ship’s owner would need the Iranian regime’s assistance to refloat the vessel and would have to pay for that assistance.
During the war with the United States and Israel, the Iranian regime disrupted the main shipping lane through the Strait of Hormuz and forced vessels to transit south of Larak Island.
Reports indicate that the Iranian regime has laid at least 80 naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz and clearing them is expected to delay the full reopening of this strategic waterway.


