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no ships through: US to block iranian tankers, iran to block all others....
President Donald Trump has sent US Navy ships into the Strait of Hormuz to create a blockade - something experts warn could put American lives at risk. Trump announced the move via Truth Social on Sunday, saying the naval assets would 'begin the process of blockading any all ships trying to enter' the Strait. US Central Command confirmed the blockade of 'all maritime traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports' will start on Monday at 10am ET. Vessels using the strait to travel to and from non-Iranian ports will not be impeded, CENTCOM said in a statement. The president claimed that the threat posed by the Iranian Navy is 'gone' from the key waterway thanks to the US military assault on the nation since February 28. However, experts have warned that though much of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' large battleships have been destroyed, the smaller boats that control the Strait are still intact. This means the US servicemen sent to the narrow waterway - which is only about 35 kilometers wide - will be sitting ducks for attacks by the IRGC. Farzin Nadimi, an Iran-focused senior fellow with the Washington Institute, told the Wall Street Journal that more than 60 percent of the IRGC’s fast-attack craft and speedboat fleet is still operating. David Des Roches, a former director responsible for Persian Gulf policy at the Defense Department, also noted that Iran's 'asymmetrical strategy is working.' The smaller, more nimble boats are well versed in controlling the crucial chokepoint by deploying missiles and mines, and by harassing commercial ships. 'Effective immediately, the United States Navy, the Finest in the World, will begin the process of BLOCKADING any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz,' Trump announced via Truth Social Sunday morning. 'Any Iranian who fires at us, or at peaceful vessels, will be BLOWN TO HELL!' he added. 'Iran knows, better than anyone, how to END this situation which has already devastated their Country. 'Their Navy is gone, their Air Force is gone, their Anti Aircraft and Radar are useless, Khamenei, and most of their “Leaders,” are dead, all because of their Nuclear ambition. The Blockade will begin shortly.' It comes amid a tenuous two-week ceasefire deal Trump struck with Tehran, which agreed to stop fighting in exchange for the opening of the strait. Iran warned by marine radio that any unauthorized ships trying to cross the strait in the meantime would be destroyed. Only four ships passed on day one, and Iran plans to limit traffic to about a dozen daily, down from more than 100. Tehran has also warned of possible antiship mines, urging vessels to follow new coastal routes with Revolutionary Guard guidance. White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly told the Journal that the U.S. had completed 'the largest elimination of a navy over a three-week period since World War II.' She also noted that the 'U.S. military has destroyed Iran's ability to shoot ballistic missiles or produce more, which will help secure the free flow of energy in the long term.' The USS Franklin Petersen and the USS Michael Murphy are the two American destroyers currently in the Strait. In his Sunday Truth Social post, Trump also said that Iran was 'unwilling to give up its nuclear ambitions' as Vice President JD Vance returned from peace talks in Pakistan empty-handed. A US official familiar with the deliberations told The Daily Mail that at the outset of the talks, it was clear that the Iranians did not properly apprehend America's core objective, which was that any potential deal has and always would have at its center the fact that Iran would never obtain a nuclear weapon. Over the course of the deliberations, the Vice President corrected this misunderstanding and used his time with his counterparts to probe their own assessments of their positions, per the US official. The official also conveyed that the Iranians need to recognize that the realities on the ground do not reflect the assumptions they held when they arrived at the negotiations before they will be ready to entertain a serious offer. The Vice President still believes that a deal remains on the table, and that it is on the Iranians to accept it. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15726949/Trump-US-Hormuz-Strait-Iran-IRGC-Fleet-Tehran.html
WE BELIEVE THAT AN IRANIAN DEAL IS STILL ON THE TABLE AND IT IS UP TO THE USA TO ACCEPT IT...
PLEASE VISIT: YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005. Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951. RABID ATHEIST. WELCOME TO THIS INSANE WORLD….
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Global oil prices have surged above $100 after the US Department of War announced that American forces will begin enforcing a blockade on all maritime traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports from 10 am ET (2 pm GMT) on April 13.
US Central Command said the blockade would apply to vessels of all nations calling at Iranian ports on the Arabian Gulf and Gulf of Oman, but insisted that it would not impede freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz for ships travelling to and from non-Iranian ports.
Global oil prices soared past $100 a barrel after the announcement, as Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf warned Americans to “enjoy” current prices at the pump, adding that “soon you’ll be nostalgic for $4–$5 gas.”
President Donald Trump has previously threatened to deny “safe passage” to any ships that have complied with Iran’s transit rules.
Iran, for its part, has warned that any hostile military activity in the waterway will be met with force, even as President Masoud Pezeshkian has said a deal would still be possible if Washington abandoned what he called “totalitarianism.”
Key developments:
https://www.rt.com/news/638259-us-iran-oil-blockade/
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
RABID ATHEIST.
WELCOME TO THIS INSANE WORLD….
more pain at the pump....
Don’t Be Fooled, The Hormuz Crisis Is Coming
Nate Bear Don Not Panic
Don’t be fooled by the relative lull since the onset of the ceasefire between Iran and the US.
The economic crisis is coming.
The fuse has been lit. We’re still in the burning down phase. But the bomb will go off.
First off, there is still nothing moving through the Strait of Hormuz. Yesterday, just two tankers made it through. On Thursday, three. And of those that have made it through, it’s only been oil. No gas, no fertiliser, no plastics, no aluminium, no helium. Nothing for six weeks. Pre-war, between 130 and 150 ships transited daily carrying all manner of goods.
Four days into the ceasefire, traffic is effectively still completely stalled.
And Iran has been clear that it will not reopen the Strait unless its ceasefire terms, including the end of the Israeli bombardment of Lebanon, are met. The US has so far shown little sign that it will rein in its rabid genocidal colony of thieves.
So the Strait will stay closed.
What this means is that right now, we’re eating into the liquid fuels, gasses and petrochemical by-products that exited the Strait and were on their way to global destinations on February 27th.
A tanker moves at about the speed of a push bike. The global economy therefore is operating on a pre-war economy of abundance. The lubricants, both metaphorically and in reality, are still moving through the system, greasing the cogs and pistons.
Because of this, the consequences that were put in motion as a result of the US-Israeli attack on Iran have yet to be realised in meaningful ways for many of us.
And I’m not sure anyone really understands this.
Countries in Asia closer to the Strait have begun to feel the pinch. Because tankers that exited on February 27th off loaded in those countries a couple of weeks ago, so now the glass is emptying for them first.
They’re adapting in a variety of ways. The richer Asian countries, including Japan, South Korea and China, could afford to stockpile and so are more resilient. But all have begun eating into their large stockpiles of oil (around 200 days for Japan and South Korea), and strategic reserves. The more vulnerable counties in the region with limited stockpiles, such as the Philippines, Thailand, Pakistan and Bangladesh are relying on fuel subsidies, price controls, and preparing emergency rationing plans. Some like Bangladesh and Sri Lanka have initiated rolling blackouts and four-day weeks.
The east is a looking glass, portending many of our futures. The fuel shortages eventually will arrive everywhere. This is an inevitability. Physical reality determines and demands it.
As I wrote about before, in the coming weeks and months, the atoms and molecules are simply not going to be where they are wanted and needed in the quantities required.
There will be more in some places, less in others, depending on stockpiles, contracts and access to US, Canadian and Russian energy markets, but the overall global system will not be able to adjust to this supply shock and re-balance smoothly.
I’m re-emphasising the point because, again, it would be very easy, given the ceasefire talks, given Iran hasn’t been bombed for a few days and hasn’t launched in retaliation, to be lulled into a false sense of security/abundance.
We look around, the war seems to be winding down, and things are still ticking along. But it’s like looking out into the stars. We’re looking at the past.
The Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera reported that the last tanker of jet fuel from the Persian Gulf to Europe arrived in Rotterdam yesterday. After that, European supply stops and will only restart once the Strait reopens. Europe might try to buy some from the US and Canada, but both are likely to hold on to their own supply for the most part. Russia may sell a bit, but is in no mood to help Europe out in any significant way. Major European airports keep just a few days of jet fuel in storage tanks on site.
But then that’s it.
One in twenty flights were cancelled last week. In the coming weeks, more and more flights will be cancelled. If the Strait stays closed for another few weeks, we are, without exaggeration, looking at the collapse of commercial air travel.
Jet fuel supply will be rationed and prioritised for critical cargo, especially food and medical supplies.
But if the closure really drags on, even that will run out eventually.
And no government in the world appears to be telling their citizens what’s coming. Most people are clueless. No serious measures have yet been announced. Not only because authorities don’t want people to panic, but because the experience of covid has made people fundamentally distrust authorities in a crisis. So governments are being more cautious than ever.
Crisis response has been politicised. It’s a problem.
I suspect there’s also an optimism bias in action, a sense that things are just going to be ok.
That certainly seems to be driving the market response.
And as most of our governments are middle manager technocrats who look to the markets for divine guidance, the lack of market reaction is feeding into the lack of political reaction.
So what can we do as individuals?
Most of us, not a lot. If you drive, fill some jerry cans with fuel at the current price. And although food right now is somewhat less of a problem, throwing a few extra non-perishable jars and tins in the basket isn’t a bad idea. Because even despite record high wheat and rice stockpiles, and fertiliser prices below Ukraine war levels, food prices are rising. Sugar is up 7%, followed by vegetable oil and wheat at more than 4%. Dairy and meat prices are also rising. The longer the Strait stays closed, the more prices will rise.
Beyond a bit of low-level prep, let’s hope for the best.
But if you care about justice, it’s hard to know what “the best” would be.
Iran shouldn’t cave on its demands because the US-Israel started a war that blew up the global economy. They should hold out for the best deal possible, for an end to the impunity of imperial violence, sanctions relief and a new arrangement in the Strait. Some argue that pushing for this outcome could, paradoxically, drive the US back to consequence-free imperial violence. But that will only provoke more Iranian missiles and worsen the global economic situation. And the Americans, for all their murderous stupidity, know this.
US planners also know that for all the talk of American fuel self-sufficiency, this only applies in a narrow way. The US imports significantly from Canada and Mexico, its refineries are integrated into global flows, and domestic oil gets priced against international benchmarks. Shortages anywhere affect prices everywhere, even the US. And the US also still does import more than 10% of its oil from the Persian Gulf.
So a re-escalation against Iran will be bad for everyone, including the Americans. Which is why I don’t think they will return to war.
I could be wrong, obviously.
But a resumption of the war on the same attritional terms as before doesn’t achieve anything for the US and just makes a bad situation worse. Already a massive amount of infrastructure has been damaged. In the final salvo before the ceasefire, Iran hit the East-West pipeline which enables Saudi oil to bypass Hormuz and be piped straight to the Red Sea for export. The attack has taken out about 10% of supply through this route. Iran held off until the last day, a strategic decision designed to signal that they know where the key oil routes are and will keep hitting them if they don’t get a deal on, or close to, their terms.
The only military escalation that could change anything is a full ground invasion to enact regime change, à la Iraq. But this won’t happen. The US does not have the troops, they can’t rouse an Iraq-style 30 country “coalition of the willing”, and Iran is not Iraq, either in terms of geography or the willingness of the average Iranian to let American troops walk into their capital.
A limited island invasion, mooted as likely by some, may succeed militarily, but strategically doesn’t make sense. Taking an island or two by the Hormuz pinch point would, far from force a reopening, turn the Strait into a war zone. And taking Kharg island, the hub of Iranian oil production and export, also makes no sense. What are they going to do with it? They need the tankers to be exporting Iranian oil to avoid a global depression. They’re not going to take Kharg only to let operations keep running as before. And Iran isn’t going to do a Venezuela and sign over their oil rights if Kharg was taken. In the event of a Kharg invasion, it would be back to war and a global depression would loom.
I’ve seen a lot of analysis that says this ceasefire is designed only to buy time for the US-Israel to regroup and either go back to bombing Iran or start some kind of ground invasion. I totally get the scepticism. But when I play any likely sequence of events forward in my head, I only ever reach the conclusion that a resumption would be so bad for the world, and so unlikely to achieve any outcome favourable to the US, that almost everyone is motivated to avoid it happening.
Stopping Israeli mass murder in Lebanon is the hardest point to negotiate. But I’m going to stick my neck out and go against the grain somewhat. I think the ceasefire will hold.
I think Trump, at the behest of his ego, his narcissism, and Israel, has fucked it for empire and helped deliver a true anti-imperial victory. One for the ages. One that could really change everything. And I’m going to do something more comprehensive on that next week.
So, assuming the US doesn’t revisit the plan to plunge the world into a permanent, epoch-defining depression by rage-destroying everything in the country, Iran is firmly in the driving seat.
What comes next, including how long the Strait remains closed, is up to them.
What comes next for us are higher prices and shortages.
(If you appreciate my analysis please consider buying me a coffee or upgrading your subscription. Your financial support is invaluable.)
https://scheerpost.com/2026/04/12/dont-be-fooled-the-hormuz-crisis-is-coming/
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PLEASE VISIT:
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
RABID ATHEIST.
WELCOME TO THIS INSANE WORLD….