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The Hormuz crisis is likened to the 1956 Suez event for the UK, signaling a potential turning point for US global power. The US may be forced into an impossible choice: print money into an oil spike to save the bond market, or let the economy crash and accept a diminished global role.
The failure to militarily secure the Strait of Hormuz is a major strategic concession. It demonstrates a critical vulnerability and effectively hands Iran control over a global economic chokepoint, allowing them to wield immense leverage over international trade.
The war in Iran is choking the Strait of Hormuz, which handles 20% of global oil. This disruption impacts nearly three times more oil volume than Russia's exports at the start of the Ukraine war, posing a significantly larger threat to the global economy and inflation.
The war is a symptom of a larger US strategy to prevent a Eurasian trading bloc (Russia, China, Iran) that would threaten its control over maritime trade and the dollar's reserve status.
The current Iran crisis could mirror the 1957 Suez Crisis, which marked the transfer of global power from the British Empire to the U.S. If China successfully leverages the situation to its diplomatic and economic advantage, it could signal a similar shift in global power away from the United States.
The US has long used the threat of military force to keep the Strait of Hormuz open. By failing to act despite a large naval presence, it has revealed this deterrent is hollow. This hands Iran a proven economic weapon and erodes the credibility of US power projection globally.
The US is trapped. Withdrawing from Iran would signal imperial collapse, causing allies to defect and the dollar to fail. Therefore, leaders feel forced to double down and escalate, like a gambler chasing losses.
Iran successfully leveraged its control over the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global trade chokepoint, to create immense economic pressure. This conventional deterrent shifted the burden onto the US to de-escalate, proving more immediately impactful than a theoretical nuclear capability.
A single major geopolitical event, like the discussed Iran conflict, can simultaneously and rapidly reverse numerous positive, interconnected economic indicators. This demonstrates the extreme fragility of prevailing market storylines, flipping everything from energy prices and equity performance to inflation and central bank policy.
By selectively allowing passage for tankers pricing oil in Chinese Yuan, Iran is playing a high-stakes game. This forces countries to bypass the US dollar to secure their energy supply, directly threatening the foundation of American global economic power and accelerating de-dollarization.
Despite significant military losses, Iran is successfully leveraging its control over the Strait of Hormuz. This asymmetric strategy chokes global energy markets, creating economic pain that Western nations may be less willing to endure than Iran, potentially snatching a strategic victory from a tactical defeat.