Beyond the Strait of Hormuz
Beyond the Strait: A Hybrid Response to Energy Vulnerability Iran has closed the Strait of Hormuz—but it cannot close our determination to open new channels. Channels that flow not through chokepoints controlled by hostile states, but through innovation, policy, and personal responsibility. The threat of conflict in the Persian Gulf delivers a warning that goes beyond geopolitics: as long as we depend on oil that must pass through twenty-one miles of navigable water, we remain a civilization held hostage by geography. If the current crisis teaches us anything, it is this: the world’s energy supply is terrifyingly fragile. A cheap, makeshift drone can disrupt global markets. For decades, we have assumed that the United States—and the broader global economy—could safely absorb the risk of a hostile state controlling the flow of oil through its neighborhood. America’s historic response has been to deploy naval power to "sort things out" and then return to business as usual. ...