The Strait of Hormuz is the world’s economic throat—and if President Trump doesn’t cut Iran’s grip now, oil shocks will spread fast, markets will panic, and no shipping lane will feel safe again. The truth is, this isn’t just a war—it’s a test of control—and if President Trump fails to reopen Hormuz, Iran proves a deadly point: a few drones and mines can shake the entire global economy.
I don’t buy the fear. I don’t buy the hesitation. I see a
chokehold, and I see a moment. And I’m saying it plain: President Trump has a
shot to become the ultimate headstone that buries what’s left of Iran’s regime
by ripping open the Strait of Hormuz and taking control away from Tehran for
good.
Let’s call it what it is. Iran is playing pirate with a
state flag. Roughly 20% of the world’s oil and liquefied gas flows through that
narrow strip of water, barely 50 km wide at its tightest point. That’s not just
geography—that’s leverage. And Iran has been squeezing it. Nineteen commercial
ships hit. Traffic reduced to a crawl. Markets shaking like a drunk on payday.
Oil spikes, insurance rates explode, and the world pays the bill.
I have seen this movie before. In the 1980s, during the
Iran-Iraq War, Iran mined the Gulf and attacked tankers. The U.S. responded
with Operation Earnest Will in 1987, escorting Kuwaiti tankers through hostile
waters. Then came Operation Praying Mantis in 1988, when the U.S. Navy smashed
Iranian naval forces after a mine nearly sank the USS Samuel B. Roberts. The
message was simple: close the lane, and we will reopen it—with force. When a
bully blocks the road, someone has to drive through him.
Now here we are again. Different decade. Same playbook.
Only this time, the stakes are bigger and the weapons are nastier.
Iran is not stupid. It doesn’t need a navy to win this
game. It has drones like the Shahed-136, flying over 1,500 km. It has missiles
hidden in caves and tunnels. It has speedboats packed with explosives, ready to
swarm like angry hornets. And beneath the water? Mines. Around 6,000 of them by
some estimates. Old-school contact mines. Smart mines triggered by sound or
magnetic signals. Cheap, deadly, and hard to clear.
So when I hear people say reopening the strait is “too
risky,” I laugh. War is risk. Leadership is risk. History doesn’t remember the
cautious—it remembers the decisive.
Trump’s Operation Epic Fury is already moving. Two Marine
amphibious units heading to the Gulf. Paratroopers lining up behind them.
Warplanes dropping 5,000-pound bunker busters, smashing underground missile
stockpiles. A-10 Warthogs shredding speedboats like paper. Over 120 Iranian
vessels hit. Forty-four mine-layers taken out. That’s not talk. That’s
pressure.
Still, I won’t sugarcoat it. This will be ugly. Three
phases, each one a gamble.
First, you hunt. You find every missile launcher, every
drone base, every hidden boat. You bomb caves, garages, tunnels. You send in
aircraft, maybe even troops. But here’s the truth: you won’t get them all. You
never do. Cut the snake, and the tail still bites.
Second, you sweep for mines. That’s where things get
tricky. The U.S. Navy hasn’t focused on mine warfare for years. Avenger-class
ships pulled out. New systems still shaky. Underwater drones, airborne
sensors—good tech, but not battle-tested. Clearing a minefield isn’t like
flipping a switch. It’s slow, dangerous work. One mistake, and a tanker goes up
in flames.
Then comes the final act—the convoy. This is where it
gets real.
Imagine it. Tankers moving in tight formation. Destroyers
escorting them. Fighter jets overhead. Drones scanning the sky. Helicopters
hunting threats. Every second, someone is watching for a missile streaking in
or a drone diving down. The strait is narrow. Reaction time is short. One slip,
and the whole convoy is at risk.
And yet, this is the moment that decides everything.
Because if those ships start moving again—if oil flows
freely—prices drop. Fast. We’ve seen it before. During the 1991 Gulf War, once
supply routes stabilized, oil prices fell sharply from crisis highs. Markets
don’t wait for perfection; they react to confidence. Reopen Hormuz, and
confidence comes roaring back.
Critics will say it’s too expensive. Too dangerous. Too
uncertain. I say doing nothing is worse. Because right now, Iran is proving a
brutal truth: you don’t need to win a war to control the outcome. You just need
to disrupt the system. A few drones. A few mines. A few hits on commercial
ships. That’s enough to shake the global economy. That’s not strategy—that’s
blackmail. And if the United States backs down, it sets a precedent. Tomorrow
it’s Hormuz. Next time it’s the South China Sea. Then maybe the Suez Canal. The
world’s arteries become bargaining chips for whoever is bold enough to threaten
them.
I’m not blind. I know Iran will fight hard. This regime
has been preparing for this for decades. As Bryan Clark of the Hudson
Institute, a think-tank in Washington, put it, they’ve been saving their tools
for this exact moment. And they can keep hitting targets as long as the U.S.
stays in the fight.
But that cuts both ways. America doesn’t need perfection.
It needs dominance. It needs to reduce the threat enough to reopen the lane—and
keep it open.
That’s where Trump’s gamble becomes history. Because if
he pulls this off—if he breaks Iran’s grip on the strait, restores global
shipping, and crushes the idea that choke points can be weaponized—then this
isn’t just a military win. It’s a geopolitical earthquake.
Oil prices fall like a rock. Markets stabilize. Allies
breathe again. And Iran? It loses its most powerful lever. And Trump? He
doesn’t just win a battle. He redraws the map.
I can already hear the critics sharpening their knives.
“Too reckless.” “Too dangerous.” “Too costly.” But history doesn’t care about
safe opinions. It cares about results.
And if Operation Epic Fury ends with the Strait of Hormuz
wide open and Iran pushed out of the driver’s seat, then President Trump will
go down in history as the president who
didn’t blink, didn’t stall, and didn’t negotiate with a rogue state—but broke
it, permanently shifting the balance of power in the Middle East.
When the door is locked and the house is burning, you
don’t knock—you kick it in.
This article stands on
its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief BookSeries”. Read it here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.






