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Contrary to popular belief, the US may not be panicking over the Hormuz closure. The crisis forces global buyers to purchase American oil and gas, generating revenue that can finance America's strategic transition to next-generation energy systems.

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Every 10 days the Strait of Hormuz is closed, a 200-million-barrel physical gap is created in the global oil flow. This is not a temporary kink but a massive hole in the supply chain that will take months to resolve and normalize, even long after transit resumes.

The 20 million barrels of oil flowing daily through the Strait of Hormuz represent 20% of global supply. A blockade constitutes a disruption four times larger than the Iranian Revolution or Yom Kippur War embargoes, with no simple replacement.

Despite the US being energy independent, the price of oil is determined globally. A crisis in the Strait of Hormuz will raise prices for everyone, including Americans at the pump, as international buyers bid up the price of all available oil, including US-produced crude.

Despite reputational damage, America's status as a net energy producer insulates its economy from the oil price shocks devastating allies and emerging markets. This creates a flight to safety that paradoxically benefits the US dollar and markets, while Russia also profits handsomely.

Unlike the 1973 crisis when the U.S. depended on foreign oil, it is now the world's largest producer. While consumers feel pain from high prices, U.S. energy companies profit enormously from the same crisis. This creates an internal economic buffer that makes the nation structurally stronger against energy disruptions.

Trump is leveraging America's energy independence by telling allies to secure their own oil from the Strait of Hormuz. This forces a choice: purchase oil directly from the US or invest their own military resources, fundamentally shifting global energy security dynamics.

The current oil shock primarily benefits countries like Kazakhstan, Nigeria, and North American producers, not the traditional Gulf states whose exports are physically constrained. This shifts the flow of petrodollars away from the usual recipients, creating a new set of economic winners from higher energy prices.

By confronting Iran over the Strait of Hormuz, the US benefits either way. It either gains control of Iran's oil or, if the region descends into chaos, it can become the world's primary oil supplier by leveraging its own and Venezuelan production, making both outcomes economically advantageous.

The current crisis is the catalyst for Gulf producers (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iraq) to build extensive overland pipelines, permanently bypassing the Strait. This multi-billion dollar infrastructure spend will neutralize Iran's primary geopolitical weapon, fundamentally reshaping global energy security and logistics long-term.

While Asian countries implement 4-day workweeks to conserve fuel amid soaring oil prices, the US remains insulated. America's status as a net energy exporter, thanks to its shale revolution, acts as a crucial economic firewall against global energy shocks and their severe societal impacts.