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Document shows that the Vietnam state oil company has asked US Navy to allow tankers through the blockade.

In a Tuesday letter, the trading arm of Vietnam’s state oil company urged the U.S. Navy not to block a crude oil tanker with Iraqi oil from securing vital supplies for a Vietnamese refinery.

The U.S. Military has extended its shipping blockade against Iran to include contraband cargoes, but has stated that other oil exports to the Gulf are allowed to pass through.

Data from the MarineTraffic platform revealed that the Maltese flagged Agio Fanourios I supertanker made a U turn on May 11 after sailing out of the Strait of Hormuz and into the Gulf of Oman.

In response to a question about the tanker, the U.S. Central Command issued a statement.

The statement did not make it clear if the U.S. Navy will eventually allow the vessel's voyage to Vietnam.

According to Iran's semiofficial Tasnim News Agency, the vessel had used Iran's designated tanker route on Sunday.

The U.S. and Israeli war against Iran has led to the closing of?the Strait of Hormuz, leaving hundreds of ships stranded. This critical waterway is where 20% of global energy supplies pass.

In a letter sent on May 12 to U.S. diplomatic and military missions, Petrovietnam Oil Corporation Vice President Hoang Dinh Tung stated that "this cargo is of great importance to Nghi Son Refinery and the?Socialist?Republic of?Vietnam."

"NSRP feedstock inventories are critically low. Any further delay could halt refinery throughput and have cascading effects for millions of Vietnamese businesses, consumers, public services, and industries."

PVOIL confirmed "unambiguously" that the vessel was loaded with Basra crude oil from Iraq, sold by Iraq's State Oil Company SOMO between April 10-14.

(source: Reuters)