Rival Governments Declare Hormuz Both Open and Closed
U.S. and Iranian state posts call Hormuz open and closed while the Guardian reports reduced traffic; readers need ship records before treating either declaration as control.
The news. The narrative. The timeline.
U.S. and Iranian state posts call Hormuz open and closed while the Guardian reports reduced traffic; readers need ship records before treating either declaration as control.
Ukraine's verified X post claims 90 strikes while the Guardian leads on Russia's route suspension; treating either as proof of damage hides the unverified commercial chain.
No verified Vyshneve post survived X search; the Guardian reports both Russia's strike and Ukraine's siting inquiry, and choosing only one erases civilian accountability.
Toronto Police's verified X post fixes six shot and two dead while the Guardian carries a later exchange account; flattening either into motive erases the unresolved sequence.
No verified drowning post survived X search; the Guardian's Germany-only June count shows how Europe-wide heat tallies can erase the 99-death denominator.
No verified police post survived X search; the Guardian carries a no-indication statement, and turning it into a final motive finding would close an open murder inquiry.
A reporter's X post lists three EU trade options while the Guardian says ministers expect no decision; treating the paper as policy would invent legal force and trade effects.
The Guardian records a two-hour rescue while event-specific X searches found no status; without final fire records, dramatic imagery cannot settle casualties, acreage or cause.
Governor X says hundreds were rescued while AP and the Guardian separate one death from more than 200 children at one camp; merging them erases who died and who was saved.
No verified X post supports chaos claims; the Guardian records 20 million pounds and promised staff, but readers still lack working-kiosk and queue evidence.