Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Foreign Policy”
Tehran's Hormuz Offer Returns Trump to Square One
Iran has reportedly floated a deal: reopen the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for postponing nuclear talks. The framing is generous to Tehran on its face. It treats two unrelated problems as commensurate, and it trades a closure Iran has no right to impose for a delay on the only question that actually matters. Accepting it would not advance American policy. It would erase it.
Hormuz is a tactical disruption. The strait carries roughly a fifth of global oil shipments and any closure produces a real price spike, but the disruption is also temporary. Tankers reroute. Insurance markets adjust. Naval coalitions form. Every closure threat in the past four decades has ended the same way: the price comes down, the ships move, and Iran absorbs the political cost of having weaponized international waters. UNCLOS does not recognize Iran’s authority to close the strait in the first place. Treating its reopening as a concession is to legitimize a blockade that has no legal foundation.