The United States struck military positions on Kharg Island on Friday — army defences, the Joshen Sea Base, an airport control tower, and a helicopter hangar, with more than 15 explosions reported. Trump stated forces had "totally obliterated every MILITARY target" on the island. Iran's government rejected the characterisation, describing the strikes as an attack on civilian economic infrastructure and sovereign territory. The distinction matters: Kharg handles roughly 90% of Iran's crude exports, and the line between military and economic infrastructure on a facility of that scale is not self-evident to the state losing it.
Kharg Island occupies a specific place in Iranian strategic memory. During the Iran-Iraq War, Iraqi aircraft attacked Kharg repeatedly between 1984 and 1988 as part of the Tanker War, attempting to cut Iran's revenue lifeline. Iran dispersed exports to Sirri and Larak islands and kept oil flowing. The island's defences have been rebuilt around the lesson that Kharg will always be a target. What is new is the scale of capability arrayed against it: the strikes that hit Tehran's Shahran refineries on Day 9 were Israeli; this was the US itself reaching Iran's economic centre of gravity.
The operational pattern is deliberate restraint as threat. By destroying military targets while leaving the terminal intact, the US demonstrated both reach and discretion — the former establishes capability, the latter creates a conditional. Iran's 11.7 million barrels of crude have continued transiting Hormuz to China since 28 February , and the shadow fleet that carries it docks at Kharg. The island is not just an export terminal; it is the physical chokepoint where Iran's remaining revenue meets the sea. Every barrel loaded there now loads under the implicit condition that the terminal's survival depends on decisions made in Tehran about Hormuz.
Iran's government has reason to contest the "exclusively military" framing. Kharg's military installations exist to defend the oil terminal. Destroying the defences while sparing the terminal does not leave the economic infrastructure untouched — it leaves it undefended. The strategic effect is to make Kharg's oil operations permanently vulnerable to a follow-up strike that requires no additional intelligence preparation or force positioning. The war's cost already exceeds $24 billion at $1.9 billion per day . The question of whether Kharg's oil terminal joins the target list is now the single most consequential economic decision of the conflict.
