The Strait of Hormuz is narrow. It is mined. It is watched from the shore. Reopening it is possible. But it will not be quick. It will not be cheap. And it will not be clean. Because in that stretch of water, every ship moves through danger.
I look at the Strait of Hormuz on the map and see
something most politicians refuse to say out loud. It is not just a shipping
lane. It is a choke point with teeth. A narrow strip of water between Iran and
Oman where mountains watch from the shore like silent snipers. In peaceful
times it is crowded, hazy, and tense. In war it becomes something darker. A
floating ambush.
Before the shooting started, about 46 oil tankers crossed
the strait every day, according to shipping data from the market firm Vortexa.
Those ships carried more than 25% of global seaborne oil exports. That number
alone explains why the world holds its breath whenever Hormuz appears in the
headlines. When the strait stops, the global economy coughs. Now the traffic
has almost vanished. Since the beginning of Operation Epic Fury, tankers have
slowed to a trickle. Ships loaded with crude oil are stacking up west of the
strait. Empty tankers wait on the eastern side like taxis in a city where no
one dares step outside. The flow of oil that feeds Asia, Europe, and America
has turned into a nervous standoff.
And the reason is simple. Iran has turned the water
into a layered trap.
The weapons are not mysterious. They are brutally
practical. Iran can launch ballistic missiles and cruise missiles from its
coastline. It can release drones that hover above ships like mechanical hawks.
It can send fast attack boats packed with explosives. Beneath the waves it can
scatter thousands of sea mines, silent killers waiting for steel hulls.
One naval officer once described mines to me in blunt
terms. “They are the cheapest weapons in naval warfare,” he said. “But they can
stop the most expensive fleets on Earth.” That is not an exaggeration. Mines
have wrecked powerful navies for more than a century. During the Korean War,
American mines sank or damaged dozens of vessels and slowed amphibious
operations for weeks. In 1988, during the Iran-Iraq tanker war, the U.S. Navy
frigate USS Samuel B. Roberts nearly broke apart after striking an Iranian
mine. The explosion tore a massive hole in the ship’s hull. Only desperate
damage control kept the vessel from sinking.
War at sea is like walking through a minefield—one
wrong step and the explosion comes fast.
President Donald Trump has offered a simple solution:
escort oil tankers with American warships. On paper it sounds tough and heroic.
Warships guarding helpless merchant vessels. Convoys cutting through danger. History
says otherwise. The idea echoes Operation Earnest Will during the 1980s
Iran-Iraq War. Back then the United States reflagged Kuwaiti tankers and sent
the Navy to escort them through the Gulf. The operation worked—but only partly,
and only slowly. Even under heavy American protection, ships were hit by mines
and missiles. The Gulf became a battlefield where insurance companies, not
admirals, sometimes made the final call.
Back then Iran was cautious. Tehran feared a full naval
war with the United States while it was already bleeding in the ground war
against Iraq. Today that restraint may be gone.
Analysts like Caitlin Talmadge of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology say geography favors Iran. The Strait of Hormuz is
narrow, confined, and overlooked by mountains. Ships entering the passage move
close to the Iranian coastline whether they want to or not. That means
missiles, drones, and artillery have short flight times.
In open ocean the U.S. Navy is king. In narrow waters the
advantage shrinks fast. Imagine a convoy of oil tankers creeping through the
strait at slow speed. Destroyers and cruisers guard them with radar and
missiles. Above them, American aircraft patrol the sky. It looks powerful.
But every escort is also a target. A drone costs
thousands of dollars. A destroyer costs billions. That imbalance is not an
accident. It is the logic of modern warfare.
Iran does not need to sink an entire fleet. It only needs
one spectacular hit. One burning tanker. One crippled warship. One explosion
broadcast across global television. The psychological impact alone would freeze
shipping overnight.
Even the U.S. Navy seems cautious. Reports say American
commanders have hesitated to offer direct escorts so far. After a classified
briefing, Senator Chris Murphy bluntly said military leaders still “don’t know
how to get it safely back open.”
That is the honest answer most politicians hate. Clearing
the strait means dismantling Iran’s layered defenses one step at a time.
Military analyst Jonathan Schroden from the Center for Naval Analyses described
the problem with a metaphor that sounds almost polite. He called it “peeling
the onion.” First the missiles must be suppressed. Then the drones. Then the
swarm boats. Only after that can minesweepers enter the water.
And minesweepers are fragile. These ships are
designed to detect and destroy underwater explosives, not to survive missile
attacks. During World War II and the Cold War they were often built with wooden
hulls to reduce magnetic signatures. That makes them excellent hunters of mines
but poor fighters. Sending them into hostile waters while drones and missiles
still roam the sky would be like sending firefighters into a burning building
while someone is still throwing gasoline through the windows.
History offers another warning. During World War I,
Britain and France tried to force open the Dardanelles, a narrow Turkish strait
connecting the Mediterranean to the Black Sea. Allied fleets attacked Ottoman
defenses in 1915. The result was disaster. Several battleships struck mines and
sank. Naval commanders tried a different plan: land troops on the nearby Gallipoli
Peninsula. That campaign became one of the bloodiest disasters of the war. More
than 500,000 casualties emerged from a campaign that solved nothing.
The geography of the Dardanelles and the Strait of Hormuz
share the same cruel logic. Narrow water. High ground on shore. Defenders
firing from land while attackers drift in confined channels.
Technology has changed. Missiles have replaced old
cannons. Drones have replaced scout planes. But the strategic idea remains the
same. Draw the enemy close. Then strike.
Iran also has allies willing to stir the pot. During the Gaza
war, the Houthi militia in Yemen disrupted shipping in the Bab el-Mandeb Strait
with cheap drones and missiles. The United States struggled to suppress those
attacks. At one point an American aircraft even fell from a carrier deck while
maneuvering to evade incoming fire. Even after months of operations, traffic in
that region never fully returned to normal. That should make any strategist
nervous about Hormuz. Because the stakes are far larger.
Oil is the bloodstream of modern economies. If the Strait
of Hormuz stays blocked, global energy prices will surge. Markets will panic.
Politicians will scramble for explanations. President Trump insists the
conflict will end quickly. Maybe it will. Wars sometimes end as suddenly as
they start. But clearing the strait by force is not a simple operation. It
requires aircraft, warships, surveillance systems, drones, intelligence
networks, and time. Lots of time. And time is the one thing global markets
hate.
I have watched enough wars to recognize a dangerous
illusion when I see one. Leaders often believe technology guarantees quick
victories. Precision weapons, satellites, artificial intelligence. The modern
toolbox looks impressive. But geography still writes the final chapter. The
Strait of Hormuz is narrow. It is mined. It is watched from the shore. Reopening
it is possible. The United States has the strongest navy on Earth and the
resources to grind down Iran’s defenses. But it will not be quick. It will not
be cheap. And it will not be clean. Because in that stretch of water, every
ship moves through danger.
And in naval warfare, one mistake is enough.
For readers interested
in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are
available on Google Play. Read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.






