Trump’s strait blockade risks another serious blow to the global economy
The failure of US-Iran peace talks leaves President Donald Trump with a set of unattractive options that are unlikely to hand him a decisive or swift victory.
But he’s doubling down with a plan to impose a blockade on the Strait of Hormuz that comes with its own risks of serious and unforeseen consequences.
The administration’s depiction of weekend talks in Islamabad, Pakistan, suggested it was hoping to win capitulation from Iran on demands including a promise not to seek nuclear weapons and the reopening of the strait.
But Iran is refusing to cede this critical leverage and doesn’t accept the US claim that it’s already lost the war. The result is a deadlock that challenges one of Trump’s core beliefs: that US military might will bend all adversaries to his will.
So Trump is now under pressure to narrow Iran’s options.
He told reporters Sunday evening that he ordered the US military to enforce a blockade on the strait from 10 a.m. ET. The idea is to strangle Iran’s oil revenues and collapse its economy. The measure is also designed to frustrate Tehran’s plan to raise revenues by charging safe passage for oil tankers in the vital waterway.
Trump’s plan could certainly be disastrous for Iran’s economy, already devastated by years of sanctions and the new war. But it also threatens to worsen the war’s economic impact on the US and global economies.
Oil prices immediately spiked again on news of the blockade, with the price of a barrel of Brent crude rising 8% to $104.
This reaction will test Trump’s resolve, since Americans are already frustrated by high prices for food and housing and are now paying more than $4 a gallon on average for gasoline. Rising oil prices helped spike the inflation rate up to 3.3% in March from 2.4% in February and are having a negative impact throughout the economy.
The president explained the blockade on Fox News earlier Sunday. But he did little to clarify how it would work. “It’s called all in, all out. Yes, it’s called all in and all out,” Trump said.
“There will be a time when we will have them all come in and all come out,” Trump added, referring to hundreds of oil tankers stranded in the Persian Gulf. “But it won’t be a percentage. It won’t be a friend of yours, like a country that’s your ally or a country that’s your friend. It’s all or nothing. And that won’t be in too long a distance.”
US Central Command said Sunday the blockade would be enforced on all traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports. “CENTCOM forces will not impede freedom of navigation for vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz to and from non-Iranian ports,” it said in a post on X.
A lot of bad options
The United States and Iran each left their marathon talks in Pakistan accusing the other of inflexibility. The impasse immediately raised doubts about the durability of a two-week ceasefire that began last week. But Trump told reporters Sunday that it was “holding well.”
The plan to blockade the strait will bring its own risks. But Trump’s other options are bad.
The president could recommit to the relentless US and Israeli bombing campaign, but it’s unclear whether redoubling an onslaught that has already devastated Iran’s military and industrial complex will make its leaders more likely to cave. Should Trump follow through on a chilling threat to take out power plants and bridges, he could hurt the civilians he once vowed to help and risk Iranian reprisals against US allies, raising the war’s already-steep costs.
And any attempt by Trump to leave the region after declaring US military goals complete would be undermined by Iran’s stranglehold on the strait — a vital global oil exporting choke point — and its retention of its enriched uranium stockpile.
Trump has no choice but to try to open the strait
Former US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley said Trump had no choice but to try to open the strait. “If we did not do anything to stop them, not only would they have leverage; they would have even more money than they had before to funnel money to their proxies, even more money to buy supplies for ballistic missiles and continue their nuclear production,” Haley told CNN’s Dana Bash on “State of the Union” on Sunday.
The president’s idea of blockading the strait might be a way of testing Iran’s control over the waterway without the high-risk move of committing US ground troops to attack shore-based missile facilities, which could lead to American casualties. But the operation might also make US ships more vulnerable to Iranian attacks.
Blocking the strait would also raise the risks of diplomatic confrontations with large powers such as China if the US sought to halt any of their vessels transiting the strait. Trump has invested substantial political capital in his summit next month with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, which has already been postponed once because of the war.
A US blockade halting all ships that agreed to Iran’s terms of passage might also harm allies like Japan and those in Europe that Trump has already alienated with the war and which rely heavily on Gulf oil supplies.
Small wonder that some Trump critics doubt his latest attempt to wrest control of the war will work, seeing it as another example of erratic leadership featuring shifting rationales for the conflict, grave threats and climb downs.
“I don’t understand how blockading the strait is going to somehow push the Iranians into opening it. I don’t get the connection there,” Sen. Mark Warner, a Virginia Democrat, said on “State of the Union.”
White House explains how the Iran talks foundered
The White House on Sunday listed the US demands that Iran refused to accept. They included an end to all uranium enrichment and the dismantling of nuclear facilities damaged during US raids last year. To forestall future development of nuclear programs, the administration wants to ensure the retrieval of more than 400 kilograms of highly enriched uranium believed to be buried in the wreckage of Iran’s nuclear facilities.
US and Israeli war aims also include thwarting of Iran’s regional threat, which it’s imposed for years through a network of proxy radical groups. Vice President JD Vance, leading the US delegation, therefore asked the Iranians to end funding for Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis in Yemen. In what he said was Washington’s “final and best offer,” he included a demand for the opening of the strait for toll-free navigation.
From a US perspective, these are all reasonable strategic demands. But it’s arguable whether the war has advanced Trump’s capacity to deliver them.
Iran’s rejection of US demands raises the question of exactly what Washington has achieved strategically in six weeks of war. Iran’s position is little changed since talks the US broke off before launching the conflict. And it now has a new point of leverage — its control of the strait.
Iran is accusing Washington of being inflexible, and its intransigence seems to give Trump no option but to consider more military action. Iranian negotiator and Speaker of Parliament Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said it’s up to the US to respond to what he described as constructive proposals. “America understood our logic and principles, and now it is time for it to decide whether it can gain our trust or not,” he said.
For economic and political reasons, as well as strategic ones, the administration is under increasing pressure to end the war quickly — a factor likely playing into the calculations of a blockade of the strait.
Iran’s defiance is again challenging administration claims that the war is an unqualified success and that thousands of missile and air strikes have destroyed Tehran’s navy and air defenses; exacted a harsh toll on its military; and eliminated layers of the Islamic Republic’s senior leadership.
A war that Trump had hoped would be quick and decisive is dragging on with no end in sight. The economic damage is huge and growing — bad news for the president’s eroded approval ratings. Trump’s fury that US European allies refused to join a war they were not informed about in advance and did not want has meanwhile caused new splits in NATO. It is too soon to make definitive judgments on whether the war will reshape Iranian politics. But a regime that brutally represses its people has survived after defying US and Israeli military might, and it continues to threaten US Gulf allies.
The proposed blockade is Trump’s latest attempt to disprove the maxim that foreign wars are easy for presidents to start and hard for them to stop. But even if it works, it will come with heavy costs that reflect the many consequences Trump failed to foresee.