Iran's rulers turned the world's oil highway into a toll road. If nobody stops it, today's Hormuz shakedown could become tomorrow's global blueprint for economic blackmail.
I am tired of hearing people dance around this issue as
if they are walking barefoot through broken glass. Let us call a spade a spade.
In this ongoing U.S.-Israel-Iran war, which began in
February 2026, one of the strategies adopted by the remnants of Iran's ruling
regime has been to effectively close the Strait of Hormuz and allow passage
only to ships willing to pay tolls or obtain special permission. The result has
been exactly what any sane person would expect. Oil flows have been disrupted.
Shipping costs have climbed. Insurance rates have shot through the roof. Energy
markets have become nervous wrecks. Businesses have paid more. Consumers have
paid more. Entire economies have paid more.
That is not diplomacy. That is not strategy. That is a
shakedown.
If a gang blocked the only bridge connecting several
cities and demanded money before allowing trucks to pass, nobody would call it
foreign policy. Everybody would call it extortion. Yet when a government does
essentially the same thing in one of the world's most important waterways, some
people suddenly develop a vocabulary problem.
The Strait of Hormuz is not some forgotten creek behind a
farmer's barn. It is one of the most important maritime chokepoints on Earth.
Roughly 20% of the world's oil trade passes through it. It is the artery
through which much of the economic blood of Asia, Europe, and other regions
flows. Block that artery and the patient starts gasping. That is exactly what
has happened.
Oil markets hate uncertainty. Shipping companies hate
uncertainty. Investors hate uncertainty. Consumers hate uncertainty. The moment
tankers started facing restrictions and threats, the economic ripple effects
began spreading across the globe like cracks in a windshield. And here is where
the story becomes even uglier. Officials associated with Iran's murderous
regime have reportedly signaled that they want this arrangement to continue
even after the war ends. Think about that for a second. The argument is no
longer merely about wartime measures. The objective increasingly looks like
turning a vital international waterway into a permanent cash register.
In other words, a global toll booth run by people who do
not own the road. A pirate with a necktie is still a pirate.
Some defenders of Tehran's actions claim that Iran has a
right to control what happens near its coastline. Nice try. International law
says otherwise.
The specific law at issue is the United Nations
Convention on the Law of the Sea, commonly known as UNCLOS. Under Part III of
UNCLOS, ships enjoy the right of transit passage through international straits
used for international navigation. Article 38 establishes that right. Article
44 prohibits states bordering such straits from hampering transit passage. The
principle is simple enough for a middle-school student to understand: countries
cannot arbitrarily block or tax international traffic moving through vital
global waterways.
You do not get to build a toll booth in the middle of the
world's shipping lane simply because geography dealt you a lucky hand. If that
principle collapses, chaos follows.
Suppose Egypt decides tomorrow that every vessel crossing
the Suez Canal must pay whatever random amount Cairo demands. Suppose Turkey
decides to do the same in the Bosporus. Suppose Denmark does it in the Danish
Straits. Suppose Indonesia starts inventing fees for ships moving through the
Malacca Strait. The result would be a global maritime circus. Trade routes
would become hostage routes.
Every government sitting next to a strategic chokepoint
would suddenly discover a new addiction to easy money.
The world abandoned that logic centuries ago for good
reason.
Historically, civilizations prosper when trade routes
remain open and predictable. They suffer when those routes become hostage to
political blackmail. The Barbary pirates learned that lesson the hard way. So
did countless rulers who tried turning commerce into a hostage negotiation.
The formula never changes.
Extortion works until someone stronger gets tired of
paying.
What amazes me, however, is not Iran's behavior.
Governments throughout history have attempted to exploit strategic geography.
Human greed is not exactly a new scientific discovery. What amazes me is the
reaction—or lack thereof—from those who have the most to lose.
China receives a massive share of the oil moving through
Hormuz. Asian countries collectively receive nearly 90% of the crude oil
transported through that waterway. Europe also depends heavily on stable energy
markets. If Hormuz sneezes, their economies catch a cold.
Yet where is the outrage? Where is the urgency? Where is
the determination? The silence is deafening. It is almost like watching a man
stand calmly beside a burning house while arguing that fire is a complicated
issue requiring further study.
No. The house is on fire. The issue is not complicated. The
world's most important energy highway is being treated like a neighborhood
parking lot controlled by a street gang. China should be furious. India should
be furious. Japan should be furious. South Korea should be furious. Europe
should be furious. Instead, much of the world appears content to let America
carry the burden while they continue calculating profits, issuing statements,
holding conferences, and organizing diplomatic tea parties.
There is an old saying: everyone wants to go to heaven,
but nobody wants to die. Today, everyone wants free navigation through Hormuz,
but too many countries seem unwilling to shoulder the costs and risks required
to guarantee it.
That approach is shortsighted. The stakes are larger than
oil. The stakes are larger than Iran. The stakes are larger than this
particular war. The real question is whether international waterways belong to
the international community or to whichever government happens to have missiles
positioned nearby.
That question matters because precedents have a nasty
habit of spreading.
If the world accepts that a government can effectively
charge passage fees in a major international strait, then every ambitious
strongman around the globe will start taking notes. Some people collect
baseball cards. Others collect bad ideas. Authoritarian governments are often
enthusiastic collectors of bad ideas.
The Iranian people are not the villains in this story.
Ordinary Iranians are not deciding maritime policy. They are not collecting
tolls from tankers. They are not sitting in command centers drawing up plans to
squeeze global trade routes. Many of them have suffered enormously from war,
sanctions, economic hardship, and political repression.
The issue is the ruling establishment and the decisions
it has made. And those decisions have transformed one of the world's most
important waterways into something resembling a protection racket.
I keep hearing people describe this situation using
sanitized language. "Maritime leverage." "Strategic
pressure." "Regional influence." Give me a break. When somebody
blocks a road and demands payment, it is called extortion. When somebody blocks
an international waterway and demands payment, it is still called extortion. A
wolf wearing a tuxedo is still a wolf.
The Strait of Hormuz is not Iran's private driveway. It
is not Iran's personal ATM machine. It is not Iran's family business. It is a
critical international waterway that helps power the global economy. The longer
the world tolerates this nonsense, the more expensive the bill becomes. And as
every shopkeeper knows, the longer you feed a stray cat, the more convinced it
becomes that it owns the house.
If you’re looking for
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