عاجل
INTLLawsuit Alleges US Shared Iranian Asylum Seeker Data with TehranCNHong Kong Proposes Admin Fee for Prepaid Contract Refunds to Prevent AbuseINFlexible Workspace Operators Lead Delhi-NCR Office Leasing SurgeGLOBALJannik Sinner Reaches Wimbledon Semi-Finals with Composed VictoryGLOBALPrince Harry and Others Lose High Court Privacy Case Against Daily Mail PublisherRUMultiple News Reports: Ukraine Conflict, Russia-US Relations, and Global SecurityRUSerbian Minister: Serbia Has Significant Potential for BRICS CooperationRURussian Official: Finland President's NATO Spending Justification ClaimGLOBALJefferies Recommends Quality, Low-Stress Stocks Amid AI VolatilityGLOBALNigel Farage's Constituency Reacts to MP Resignation and By-Election PledgeINTLLawsuit Alleges US Shared Iranian Asylum Seeker Data with TehranCNHong Kong Proposes Admin Fee for Prepaid Contract Refunds to Prevent AbuseINFlexible Workspace Operators Lead Delhi-NCR Office Leasing SurgeGLOBALJannik Sinner Reaches Wimbledon Semi-Finals with Composed VictoryGLOBALPrince Harry and Others Lose High Court Privacy Case Against Daily Mail PublisherRUMultiple News Reports: Ukraine Conflict, Russia-US Relations, and Global SecurityRUSerbian Minister: Serbia Has Significant Potential for BRICS CooperationRURussian Official: Finland President's NATO Spending Justification ClaimGLOBALJefferies Recommends Quality, Low-Stress Stocks Amid AI VolatilityGLOBALNigel Farage's Constituency Reacts to MP Resignation and By-Election Pledge
Newsgather
BackUS Military Capability and Strategic Rationale for a Gulf Blockade
US Military Capability and Strategic Rationale for a Gulf Blockade
يتطور
BBC News13.04.2026Defense3 dk okuma

US Military Capability and Strategic Rationale for a Gulf Blockade

Analysts assess the risks and potential impact of a US naval blockade on Iranian shipping

نظرة سريعة

  • The US military is evaluating the feasibility and strategic impact of a naval blockade on Iranian ports.
  • While experts suggest the operation is logistically sound and safer than escorting convoys, the long-term effectiveness remains uncertain due to Iran's potential resilience.

ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي

لماذا يهم

The conflict between the US and Iran has been ongoing since late February, with Iran continuing to export petrochemicals despite regional tensions.

حجم الخط

There's no doubt the US military has the capability to mount a blockade of vessels moving in and out of the Gulf. The question is: to what end?

"I do think it's doable," retired US Rear Admiral Mark Montgomery told the BBC this morning. "And it's certainly less risky than the alternative, which would have been to forcibly push back the Iranians and create the conditions for a convoy."

Some of the options floated by President Trump in recent weeks – the seizure of Kharg Island or militarily escorting convoys through the Strait of Hormuz – would have proved hazardous and potentially costly.

US forces involved would have exposed themselves to attack from Iranian missiles, drones and fast boats. The possible presence of mines in the water would have added another layer of danger.

By contrast, a blockade allows US warships to loiter safely, far offshore in the waters of the Gulf of Oman, track vessels emerging from Iranian ports and interdict them at will.

"There's less risk in this than there is in the very confined area of the Strait," Admiral Montgomery said.

With special forces, helicopters and its own fast boats all available, the US navy has all the assets it needs for such an operation.

Recent blockades of Venezuela and Cuba have demonstrated the capability. In early January, the seizure of the Russian oil tanker, the Marinera, far out in the northern Atlantic, showed that such operations can be carried out almost anywhere.

US Central Command (Centcom) says the latest blockade "will be enforced impartially against vessels of all nations entering or departing Iranian ports and coastal areas," but that vessels using non-Iranian ports will not be stopped.

The logic seems clear. Since the war began, Iran has successfully continued to export its own petrochemicals through the Gulf, earning billions of dollars while preventing other Gulf countries from exporting their own hydrocarbons.

A successful US blockade could halt that flow, robbing the Iranian regime of badly needed revenue and weakening its economy still further.

But Iran, which has already shown enormous resilience in the face of more than a month of attacks by the US and Israel, may well feel that it can weather yet another storm. Especially as any fresh blockade is likely to push up oil prices still further.

"They believe they can outweigh this," David Satterfield, a former US special envoy for Middle East humanitarian affairs, told the BBC, "that the US will feel pain from oil prices and that the Gulf states will pressure the US, ultimately, to get the Strait open again."

"They think they've won," he said. "The Iranians believe…that they can absorb more pain for a longer period than their opponents can."

Shipping experts are watching the trickle of vessels emerging from Iranian ports and passing through the Strait of Hormuz to see what impact the US blockade will have.

"We saw a few U turns in the wake of Trump's original announcement last night," says Richard Meade, editor-in-chief of Lloyd's list.

According to Meade, the previous 48 hours saw the busiest period of traffic moving through the Strait of Hormuz since the war began at the end of February, with about 30 traceable transits (in other words, vessels sailing with their automatic identification equipment switched on).

"It looked like a flurry of vessels trying to get out," he says.

With very little currently moving, it may be some time - if at all - before we see the US navy intercepting vessels sailing in or out of Iranian ports.

ما الذي يجب مراقبته

توقعات الذكاء الاصطناعي — احتمالات وليست حقائق

  • Increased volatility in global oil prices

    مرجح · خلال أيام

  • Diplomatic pressure from Gulf states on the US to maintain open shipping lanes

    محتمل · خلال أسابيع

أسئلة مفتوحة

  • How will the US enforce the blockade against non-Iranian vessels carrying Iranian cargo?
  • What is the specific threshold for Iranian retaliation?
  • Will Gulf states officially support or oppose the blockade?

مواضيع ذات صلة

This article was originally published by BBC News.

أخبار ذات صلة

المزيد حول هذا الموضوعus military