In Brief:

Trump has called for an international warship coalition to patrol the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz. The move comes amid escalating tensions with Iran over the crucial oil shipping route.

Former president urges international naval deployment as Iranian tensions threaten critical oil shipping lane.

Donald Trump wants a multinational naval coalition. He’s targeting the Strait of Hormuz again — exactly what you’d expect from his old presidential playbook. Yet the world has changed dramatically since 2021. Regional tensions are simmering right now, and global energy markets remain extremely vulnerable. Sources confirmed the timing is no coincidence.


Between Iran and Oman sits this narrow waterway — the world’s most critical energy chokepoint. One-fifth of global petroleum moves through daily. That is a staggering figure. Trump understands the strategic importance completely: control the Strait, control the global economy. It’s that simple.

His proposal mirrors Operation Earnest Will from 1987-1988, when American warships escorted Kuwaiti vessels. Reagan’s administration ran that successful operation. But everything has changed since Trump left office — Iran’s nuclear program has advanced significantly, regional proxy networks have grown stronger, and traditional allies won’t follow Washington blindly anymore.

Trump’s statement reveals deeper strategic concerns. Senior diplomatic sources see the bigger picture: America can’t police every global flashpoint alone. That era is ending. By Tuesday evening, defense analysts were buzzing about America’s implicit acknowledgment of limits. Nobody is saying that publicly. European allies remain deeply skeptical of confrontation, already worried about energy security after Ukraine spooked them.

Iran’s naval capabilities have evolved dramatically. They’ve built swarms of fast attack craft. Their mine-laying systems are sophisticated now — shore-based missiles can reach any target. The math is sobering. These weapons could inflict serious casualties in the Gulf’s confined waters, which make defense difficult. Tehran treats

J
Julian Thorne
Senior Diplomatic Correspondent
Julian Thorne is Delima News’s Senior Diplomatic Correspondent, formerly a foreign bureau chief for The Times. He has spent two decades reporting from The Hague and Geneva.

Source: Original Report