With Israel’s decapitation strike on Tehran’s nuclear infrastructure, the Middle East power balance has been violently redrawn. Iran reels from assassination, bombardment, and psychological defeat. Yet one final move remains on its board: blocking the Strait of Hormuz.
This narrow waterway moves a fifth of the world’s oil. Iran doesn’t need to close it permanently — sporadic harassment and mine warfare can create economic shockwaves. Missile batteries, fast-boat swarms, drone strikes, or selective targeting of flagged ships could ***** insurers and markets alike.
The global response would be fierce — U.S. and Gulf navies would move rapidly, oil prices could spike to $150, and fragile supply chains would splinter. Nonaligned powers would scramble to secure their energy interests while pleading for restraint.
Yet the motivation for Iran’s next move may not be logic — it may be survival. Rage, not reason, rules the streets of Tehran. If the regime cannot retaliate meaningfully, it loses face, influence, and control. That’s why the Hormuz threat — the nuclear option short of nukes — must be taken seriously.
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Result of an angry back and forth between colleague's who care about sanity and write to salvage reason and order in a world gone mad!