For decades, the Hormuz closure was treated as a theoretical deterrent — Iran's nuclear option for economic warfare. Most analysis assumed Iran would never actually invoke it because the strait carries not just Gulf exports but Iran's own petroleum revenues. Closing Hormuz would strangle the Iranian economy at the same time as it disrupted global markets. The IRGC invoked it within hours of the first strikes. Commercial shipping had already begun rerouting voluntarily ; the IRGC's broadcast converted a market-driven avoidance into a military declaration.
The announcement went out on VHF Channel 16 — the international maritime distress and calling frequency, monitored by every vessel at sea under SOLAS regulations. Every ship in or approaching the Gulf received it simultaneously. This was not a private diplomatic warning; it was a public declaration of armed interdiction.
Hapag-Lloyd's suspension followed within hours. Fourteen LNG tankers halted mid-transit. Major oil companies stopped shipments. The closure is not a naval blockade in the strict legal sense, but it is backed by anti-ship missiles capable of hitting vessels from Iranian territory, fast-attack boat swarms, and a minelaying capability that the IRGC has exercised repeatedly in war games.
Roughly 20 million barrels of oil transit Hormuz daily — approximately 20% of globally traded oil. OECD strategic petroleum reserves hold approximately 1.2 billion barrels, enough for roughly 60 days at full draw-down. Brent crude spiked 26.1% to $116.08 on Monday morning, the largest single-day gain since 1988. Qatar's energy minister warned of $150 per barrel if the closure is sustained.
The IRGC's willingness to close the strait despite devastating its own economy signals that the surviving command has concluded economic survival and regime survival are no longer compatible goals — and has chosen the latter. That eliminates the primary lever of Western economic pressure: you cannot threaten to damage an economy that has already accepted its own destruction.
