Sunday, April 19, 2026

Geography, energy, asymmetric power: Strait of Hormuz as Iran's permanent strategic asset

By Ivan Kesic

After forty days of determined fightback against an unprovoked war of aggression, the Islamic Republic of Iran has transformed the world’s most vital energy chokepoint into an instrument of strategic permanence.

Just three days after a ceasefire halted the joint US-Israeli aggression that began on February 28, 2026, the Strait of Hormuz remains under effective Iranian management, a fact that international political commentators have widely described as a thumping Iranian victory.

This narrow waterway, which at its most constricted point measures just 21 nautical miles across, is not merely a maritime passage but the structural heart of the global energy system.

Every day under normal conditions, approximately 20.9 million barrels of oil—one-fifth of worldwide consumption—and over 20 percent of global liquefied natural gas trade flow through its constricted channels.

For the Islamic Republic, the strait is neither a bargaining chip nor a threat but an immutable geographic endowment: a permanent source of leverage rooted in 1,600 kilometers of northern coastline, strategically positioned islands that function as unsinkable platforms, and an asymmetric military doctrine that renders conventional naval superiority irrelevant.

As the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Seyyed Mojtaba Khamenei, declared on April 9, marking the fortieth day since the martyrdom of his predecessor, Iran will now take the management of this waterway to an entirely new phase—one that transforms geographic destiny into enduring economic and strategic power.

Geography of permanence: An unsinkable asset

The Strait of Hormuz is not a canal that can be bypassed nor a route that can be replicated.

At its narrowest navigable point, the strategic waterway measures just 21 nautical miles—approximately 39 kilometers—in width, with shipping lanes reduced to a mere two miles per direction.

Iran’s coastline stretches more than 1,600 kilometers along the northern arc of the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman, giving the Islamic Republic an unbroken line of territorial oversight.

Strategically positioned islands—Qeshm, Hormuz, Larak, Abu Musa, and the Tunbs—serve as forward operating platforms, what military analysts call “unsinkable aircraft carriers.”

From these sovereign outposts, the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Navy deploys persistent surveillance drones, coastal missile grids, and fast-attack craft.

Because the entire waterway lies within 24 nautical miles of Iranian territory, the governing legal regime under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea is not free transit passage but innocent passage—a distinction that grants Iran legitimate authority to regulate vessel movement.

Numbers that define global dependence

Under normal conditions before the aggression, the Strait of Hormuz hosted a dense, predictable flow of global commerce.

Detailed maritime tracking data shows that approximately 130 to 140 vessels transited the strait daily, a figure that translates to roughly 4,000 ships per month and an astonishing 48,000 to 50,000 ships annually.

Among these, oil and gas tankers consistently dominated the composition, representing between 37 and 60 percent of all traffic depending on seasonal and market variables.

Very Large Crude Carriers, each capable of holding up to 2 million barrels of crude, accounted for approximately 35 percent of tanker movements, followed by Suezmax and Aframax tankers.

Beyond oil, bulk carriers transporting iron ore, grain, and coal made up roughly 30 to 40 percent of daily passages, while LNG and LPG carriers—though a smaller share by count, at roughly 100 transits per month or 1,200 annually—represented a strategically critical layer given that approximately 20 percent of global LNG trade flows through this same corridor.

The strait carries approximately 20.9 million barrels of oil per day, equivalent to 20 percent of all oil consumed worldwide and 25 to 27 percent of global seaborne oil trade.

In economic terms, the energy value transiting the strait exceeds $1 billion per day in oil alone. These figures are not abstractions; they are the structural foundation upon which Iran’s strategic leverage rests.

Maritime traffic collapse: From density to near-zero

The effectiveness of Iran’s strategic doctrine was demonstrated within days of the launch of the war of aggression.

By early March 2026, a detailed AIS-based observational snapshot captured 978 vessels present within the chokepoint zone, including 342 tanker-class ships—many of them stranded or held in anchorages as commercial traffic ground to a halt.

What had been 130 daily transits fell to near zero.

Maritime intelligence tracking confirmed that as of March 19, 1,290 foreign-flagged cargo and tanker vessels remained inside the Persian Gulf, unable to exit.

The composition of this stranded fleet revealed the strait’s true economic weight: bulk carriers formed the largest segment with 415 vessels immobilized, followed by 341 general cargo ships.

Crucially, 283 crude oil tankers and 226 oil products tankers were also trapped—representing a substantial chunk of global energy transport capacity.

Even the specialized gas carrier fleet was severely impacted, with 51 LNG tankers stuck in the Persian Gulf at a time when the world was already facing gas supply pressures.

Container shipping, which operates on just-in-time network logistics, suffered a severe blow as well; 119 container vessels—including 17 ultra-large container vessels above 100,000 deadweight tons—were effectively frozen, holding over 270,000 TEU of cargo valued at roughly $10 billion.

This represented not merely a disruption but a near-total evacuation of commercial shipping from the world’s most important energy artery.

Over 1,000 vessels became backed up across the Persian Gulf, including 187 fully loaded tankers carrying a combined 172 million barrels of oil.

Shipping insurance premiums soared, carriers declared force majeure, and global energy markets experienced price shocks unseen in decades.

The message was unmistakable: Iran does not need to sink a single warship to assert control. It only needs to demonstrate that the water is unsafe for commercial traffic—and the market does the rest.

Tanker economics: Record earnings and the cost of war

The financial impact of Iran’s control over the strait is most clearly visible in the tanker market, where earnings have shattered all historical records.

According to industry data, weighted-average tanker earnings reached $133,735 per day in March 2026, more than four times the 2025 average and the highest level ever recorded.

Very Large Crude Carriers, each capable of hauling up to 2 million barrels, were earning approximately $200,000 per day by late March, while Suezmax tankers surged to $330,000 per day and Aframax to $280,000 per day—both at unprecedented highs.

More dramatic figures emerged from the spot market, where some VLCCs commanded daily rates between $400,000 and $420,000, driven not by normal supply-demand dynamics but purely by war risk compensation.

The crisis has fundamentally altered global oil trade routes.

With the Strait operating at just 1 to 5 percent of normal capacity, Asian and European refiners have scrambled for alternative supplies from the US Gulf and West Africa, triggering a 41 percent drop in available VLCCs in the Mexican Gulf within a single month.

This rerouting has forced tankers onto much longer voyages around the Cape of Good Hope, effectively withdrawing additional fleet capacity from the market and ensuring that shipping costs—and thus energy prices—will remain elevated for the foreseeable future.

Tollbooth revolution: Monetizing the chokepoint

During the forty-day war, Iran moved decisively to activate a new phase of strait management. It has now proposed a transit fee of $1 per barrel of oil—approximately $2 million per supertanker.

The potential annual revenue from such a system is staggering: between $70 billion and $100 billion per year. To place this in perspective, Iran’s total oil export revenue in 2024 was approximately $46.7 billion.

A toll system could generate nearly double that amount without selling a single additional barrel of crude, a masterstroke from the Iranian side. 

Importantly, friendly vessels—particularly those from China, Russia, and Pakistan—pay tolls in Chinese yuan, Russian rubles, or cryptocurrencies such as USDT and Bitcoin, ensuring safe and uninterrupted passage while actively reducing reliance on the US dollar.

This policy transforms the strait from a passive transit route into an active economic asset, rivaling the Suez Canal’s monthly revenue of roughly $8 billion for Egypt.

Asymmetric arsenal: Cost-exchange dominance

Iran’s military-technological achievements during the recent war of aggression have demonstrated a smart economic logic that favors the defender against the aggressor. 

The Shahed-136 loitering munition costs approximately $20,000 to produce. The American SM-6 interceptor missile costs roughly $4 million per unit.

Iran can launch two hundred drones for the price of a single American interceptor.

During saturation attacks executed in Operations True Promise 1, 2, and 3, Iran overwhelmed advanced Aegis defense systems not with superior technology but with overwhelming quantity.

Even if 95 percent of incoming drones are intercepted, the remaining five percent can cripple a billion-dollar destroyer or a vital oil tanker.

This cost-exchange ratio ensures that any prolonged naval confrontation in the confined waters of the strait becomes economically unsustainable for any adversary.

These drones can be launched from almost any point within all of Iran, making enemy naval superiority or coastal invasion pointless, and there are also tens of thousands of shorter-range drones at the ready, as well as missiles.

Mining option: A low-cost, high-impact deterrent

Beyond drones and missiles, Iran possesses a capability that renders the strait permanently vulnerable to disruption: naval mine warfare.

Using Fajr-5 rockets fired from a range of 70 kilometers, Iran can deploy magnetic, intelligent, and advanced mines along the entire length of the strait without using surface vessels. Each mine costs Iran a few thousand dollars.

Clearing such a minefield would require a coalition navy no less than six months of dangerous, slow-speed operations—during which the global economy would face crippling energy shortages and food supply disruptions.

The ancillary cost to Iran is minimal, while the adversary suffers billions of dollars in daily losses. This is not a hypothetical scenario but a demonstrated capability that forms the bedrock of Iran’s permanent deterrence, according to experts.

Beyond oil: The Strait as a food security weapon

The Strait of Hormuz’s influence extends far beyond the energy sector. Iran is the world’s largest source of urea, a nitrogen fertilizer vital to global agriculture.

The broader Persian Gulf region dominates this trade, and any disruption in transit automatically drives international urea prices up by 25 to 30 percent.

This price surge directly disrupts fertilizer supply chains for major importing countries such as India, Brazil, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and most African nations.

The consequence is a cascading food crisis: soaring wheat and rice prices, worldwide food inflation, and a direct threat to the food security of billions of people.

Thus, the Strait functions as a dual chokepoint—for both energy and food—giving Iran the ability to influence the global economy without launching a single additional missile.

Ceasefire reality: Victory through resilience

Following the ceasefire that took effect on April 8, 2026, the strategic balance in the Persian Gulf has been irrevocably altered. International political commentators across Western and Eastern media have described the outcome as a clear Iranian victory.

During the 40-day unprovoked and illegal war of aggression, Iran demonstrated the ability to reduce daily traffic from approximately 140 vessels to near zero within days.

By early March, over 1,000 vessels were backed up in the Persian Gulf, including 187 loaded tankers carrying 172 million barrels of oil.

Global shipping insurance premiums soared, and shipping companies declared force majeure, refusing to send crews into the war zone.

The United States, despite its overwhelming conventional firepower, found itself unable to immediately restore order.

This performance has validated what Iranian strategists have long maintained: control over the Strait does not require full closure—only the credible threat of disruption.

New phase of management: Leader’s directive

On April 9, the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, issued a definitive statement marking the fortieth day since the martyrdom of his predecessor, Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei.

In that message, he declared: “We will definitely take the management of the Strait of Hormuz to a new phase.”

This new phase includes selective and intelligent control over vessel traffic, non-dollar toll collection, and the transformation of all external threats into opportunities to reformulate the rules of engagement in the Persian Gulf.

He also emphasized that Iran will demand full reparations for all damages caused by the aggressors, as well as blood money for the martyrs and compensation for the wounded.

The Strait of Hormuz, in this vision, is no longer anyone’s backyard—it is the sovereign territory of an established, solid, and indestructible deterrent power.

Why can no power undermine this dominance

Iran's eternal dominance over the Strait of Hormuz rests on three unchangeable foundations.

First, geography cannot be relocated: the strait is a fixed chokepoint with no viable alternative at scale, and Iran’s 1,600-kilometer coastline is a natural wall that no invading force can capture or hold without well over one million men and logistical support beyond any navy’s capacity.

Second, asymmetric technology ensures permanent leverage: low-cost drones, coastal missile grids, and naval mines give Iran high disruption potential at minimal expense.

Third, global dependence is structural: Asia receives approximately 75 percent of its energy imports via this corridor, and there is no short-term substitution capacity.

These three constants—geography, asymmetry, and dependence—create a permanent leverage triangle that no amount of military pressure or diplomatic coercion can dissolve.

Arithmetic of eternal leverage

Iran wants three things from the Strait of Hormuz: revenue, security, and strategic leverage.

Economically, it is transforming the strategic Persian Gulf waterway into a tollbooth, generating $70 to $100 billion annually.

Militarily, it uses narrow geography and cheap, mass-produced drones to neutralize any technological edge an adversary might possess.

Strategically, it holds the global economy—both energy and food supply chains—as a guarantee that any existential threat to Tehran will trigger an existential economic crisis for the rest of the world. 

With approximately 50,000 ships transiting annually, over 7 billion barrels of oil moving through its waters, and up to $100 billion in potential toll revenue, the arithmetic of power is unmistakable.

The language of threats directed at Tehran will always be met with the quiet, undeniable reality of the map: the Strait of Hormuz is, and will remain, Iran’s eternal strategic territory.

Iran Stands Firm: No Concessions in War Talks, Sovereignty Over Hormuz Non-Negotiable

The Supreme National Security Council of Iran affirmed that Iran’s negotiating delegation will make no concessions in talks aimed at ending the war, underscoring its full commitment to safeguarding national rights and defending the interests of the Iranian people.

In a statement, the council said Tehran agreed to enter negotiations following the failure of the aggression on the battlefield. However, a round of talks held in Islamabad under Pakistani mediation concluded without results after Washington presented what Iran deemed excessive demands, which were firmly rejected by the Iranian delegation.

The council stressed that any ceasefire would be contingent on a comprehensive halt to operations across all fronts, including Lebanon, accusing Israeli forces of violating the agreement from the outset.

On maritime security, the statement emphasized that access through the Strait of Hormuz would remain limited, conditional, and under full Iranian control, with continued monitoring of shipping traffic until a lasting peace is secured. It warned that any attempt to impose a naval blockade would constitute a breach of the truce.

Tehran also stated that the ongoing negotiations are based on what it calls successes in battle and that turning these successes into political wins needs ongoing readiness at home and unity among the people.

Pezeshkian: Public Resilience Thwarted Adversaries’ Plans

Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian said the resilience and determination of the Iranian people have been decisive in thwarting the objectives of the aggression, arguing that the adversaries’ military calculations collapsed in the face of public cohesion and faith.

Speaking during a visit to the Foundation of Martyrs and Veterans Affairs, Pezeshkian stated that opponents, unable to secure battlefield gains, turned to targeting civilian infrastructure, including homes, schools, and hospitals, in what he called a clear violation of international law.

He highlighted the sustained public presence over more than 40 days as a pivotal moment, describing attacks on civilians—particularly children—as a moral scandal for those claiming to defend human rights.

Pezeshkian added that attempts to incite unrest by targeting police centers and volunteer forces had failed, as the public rallied around the state and took part in its defense despite mounting threats.

He also denounced complicit or justificatory international stances toward the attacks, saying they run counter to humanitarian principles, while noting that most countries, despite external pressure, have refrained from aligning with the aggressors.

Source: Al-Manar Website

Analysis: Iran's new strategic posture ends win-win diplomacy, leaves US no choice but to concede

By Press TV Website Staff

The spokesperson for the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters on Sunday announced that Iran has reasserted full control over the Strait of Hormuz in response to the American naval blockade and acts of "piracy" in the strategic waterway.

According to Lieutenant-Colonel Ebrahim Zolfaghari, the Islamic Republic of Iran, acting in good faith and in line with previous agreements, had initially agreed to the managed passage of a limited number of oil tankers and commercial ships through the strait.

However, he added that the Americans, given their track record of repeated breaches of faith, continue to engage in banditry and piracy under the guise of a so-called blockade.

Unless the American side fully ends its disruption of the free passage of vessels originating from Iran to their destinations and back, the situation in the Strait of Hormuz will remain under severe control and will stay in its previous state, the spokesperson asserted.

For Iran, the strategic waterway is not a bargaining chip or a threat. It represents permanent leverage: 1,600 kilometers of northern coastline, unsinkable island outposts, and an asymmetric doctrine that neutralizes conventional naval power.

The fact that this waterway – through which over 20 percent of global liquefied natural gas trade flows on a daily basis – has been in the news in recent weeks amid the US-Israeli war of aggression against the Islamic Republic proves it represents a strategic asset for Iran.

After the ceasefire in Lebanon came into effect on Friday, Iran agreed to allow certain commercial vessels through the chokepoint even as the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Navy announced that a "new order" is now in place over the Strait of Hormuz, outlining strict new regulations for all maritime traffic.

According to the IRGC Navy, all transits, commercial or otherwise, will only be allowed with the explicit authorization of the IRGC's naval forces.

It’s the US, not Iran, chasing a deal

However, that did not translate into reality on the American side. They continued their banditry and kept blocking Iranian vessels despite Iran's goodwill, jeopardizing the potential next round of talks in Islamabad.

Contrary to prevailing assumptions in Western capitals, it is not Iran that is seeking an agreement with the US. Having paid the high cost of war – including the loss of its Leader, senior military commanders, and thousands of ordinary citizens – Iran has made clear that it will continue to fight until a new strategic equation is established in the region and beyond.

Having achieved an unarguable victory on the battlefield and inflicting enormous military and economic costs on the United States and its allies, including the Israeli regime, Iran will not agree to any negotiation unless all its conditions are met.

On the other side, contrary to US President Donald Trump's repetitive social media rhetoric, Washington has no choice but to accept Iran's demands if it wants to come out of the quagmire it finds itself in – partly due to its own follies and partly due to Zionist pressure.

Tehran has already signaled that it will make no concessions regarding its inalienable and legal nuclear rights under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and will continue to manage the Strait of Hormuz in the manner it deems fit.

Just as it considers the enemy as a single entity comprising the United States, Israel, and their regional allies, Iran firmly believes in the unity of the Axis of Resistance and will not allow the fate of the various fronts to be separated.

New regional and global order

The Islamic Republic of Iran, in line with its strategic doctrine, has defined a new order in the region and the world following the 40-day war of US-Israeli aggression.

The slightest mistake by the enemy is now monitored and assessed by the country that has emerged as one of the new superpowers, and it is Iran that is now in a position to impose its will upon the enemy, irrespective of their military or economic muscle.

The case of Lebanon serves as a clear example. Through 45 days of courageous and indomitable resistance against the arrogant enemy, Hezbollah and the Lebanese nation imposed its will on the Zionist enemy and forced it to halt its aggression.

Iran, by maintaining strict control over the Strait of Hormuz, actively supported the will of Hezbollah and the broader resistance. In reality, a united, coordinated, and synergistic front of the resistance imposed its collective will on the enemy.

With the re-closure of the Strait of Hormuz as announced on Saturday, this new order will once again manifest itself. Iran now safeguards its interests and imposes its will on the enemy, not through threats or diplomatic action alone, but on the ground and in practical terms, demonstrating conclusively who holds the upper hand.

This new order reflects a fundamental shift in the global balance of power. Iran, which until recently had to abide by a "win-win" rule in the political games of the great powers, has now reached a stage where it shows its real, practical, and credible power before the enemy.

This time, it is Iran that is sanctioning the enemy – and the most stubborn and powerful enemy at that. Iran has rediscovered itself, its powers, capabilities, assets, and privileges.

The unparalleled self-confidence observed today among the Iranian people, the armed forces, and the country’s officials is the direct result and fruit of this renewed self-belief.

No concessions to the enemy

Based on this authority, power, and self-belief, which even the enemy now acknowledges, no concession should be made. The era of the passive "win-win" discourse has ended.

Iran now holds the upper hand and is in a position to assert its authority. Its hand remains full, its capacities are yet to be demonstrated in full, and many options remain at its disposal.

It is the enemy that has burned through and exhausted all its options, as demonstrated in the 40-day war. Iran has emerged victorious in the war that the enemy imposed, and the Iranian people – like the country’s armed forces – have remained on the scene from the very beginning of the war and refuse to take a step back.

They support the armed forces with all they have, standing like a mountain behind them and the country’s leadership, and demanding that not the slightest concession be made to the enemy – on the battlefield or on the negotiating table.

The strategic imperative is clear: the enemy must be taught a lesson once and for all, and never again dare to insult or attack Iran.

The sanctity of Iran's nuclear capability

Iran's nuclear capability and industry are as sacred as its soil, as foreign ministry spokesman Esmaiel Baghaei clearly emphasised in a TV interview on Friday, and no one has the right to bargain over them in any form or capacity.

This national wealth belongs to the Iranian people and must remain outside any negotiations, and no promise or commitment should be made regarding it in talks.

The subject of these negotiations is not – and should not be – the nuclear issue at all. Rather, any negotiations are meant to force the enemy to accept an end to the war that it unfairly, illegally and unjustifiably imposed on the Iranian people.

Where Iran holds the upper hand, it must exact its rights from the enemy. These include compensation for the three imposed wars, reparations for the martyrs and wounded, return of Iranian assets seized and withheld from the country through the bullying power politics of past years, restoration of Iran's legitimate right to manage the Strait of Hormuz, lifting of sanctions and annulment of international resolutions against Iran, among other points.

In these negotiations, Iran must reclaim its rights, not grant new concessions. It is the enemy that must make concessions, not the Iranian people. In any war, it is the defeated side that must make concessions, not the victorious side. That’s the universal rule.

Therefore, Iran must not make the slightest concession, especially regarding its legitimate nuclear rights, and should not negotiate over the nuclear issue at all.

Iran, no longer a passive player

Iran's strategic posture has undergone a fundamental transformation, especially after the three imposed wars in the past year, including the most recent 40-day war of aggression.

It is no longer a passive player seeking accommodation with big powers. Iran now positions itself as a protagonist of the new regional and global order.

With battlefield victories, economic leverage, unified resistance fronts, and an unshakeable self-belief backed by popular public support, Iran is demanding that the enemy make the concessions.

The nuclear file is declared off-limits. The Strait of Hormuz remains a strategic lever. And the era of win-win diplomacy is over. Now it’s the winner taking it all and we know the setbacks the US-Israeli war coalition faced in the recent 40-day war.

Whether Washington and its allies are prepared to accept this new reality remains the central question of the current geopolitical crisis. Indecisiveness won’t help at this stage.