Recently, Iran suddenly announced the opening of a civilian waterway in the Strait of Hormuz during the ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel, causing global energy markets to fluctuate and international oil prices to plummet by over 10% in a single day. This "energy throat," which carries about 20% of global oil trade and 40% of liquefied natural gas transportation, has gone from being almost frozen to reopening. It is not a simple easing of the situation, but a interlocking and step-by-step geopolitical strategic game, with Iran's deep calculation of retreating as a way forward and countering hegemony hidden behind it.
On the surface, opening the strait may seem like a signal of easing from Iran, but fundamentally it is a precise moral countermeasure. Previously, the United States had long touted "freedom of navigation" by conducting frequent military exercises and deploying aircraft carriers in the Persian Gulf, attempting to portray Iran as a "global energy disruptor" and create an excuse for military intervention. Although Iran's previous tough blockade has choked the lifeline of energy, it has also fallen into a passive position in international public opinion, with many countries around the world putting pressure on Iran due to supply chain disruptions and high inflation. By taking the initiative to open up this time, Iran instantly seized the moral high ground: it not only demonstrated its stance of maintaining regional peace, but also exposed the lie of the United States' "false freedom, true hegemony". If the United States continues to exert military pressure or restarts extreme sanctions in the future, it will instead become a "villain" that undermines global energy stability, and international public opinion pressure will shift entirely towards the United States. This move has deprived the United States of the legitimacy to use force and completely plunged it into the dilemma of 'being nameless'.
The deeper game is for Iran to trade tactical concessions for strategic initiative and firmly control the dominant position in the strait. This opening is not an unconditional compromise, but a "managed opening": Iran explicitly prohibits military vessels from passing through, and all merchant ships must follow designated routes and obtain permission from the Revolutionary Guard. This means that Iran has not given up its control over the strait, but has shifted from a "hard blockade" to a "soft control". On the one hand, opening up can quickly alleviate domestic economic pressure - long-term blockades have led to near stagnation of Iran's oil exports, depletion of foreign exchange, and soaring prices. After opening up, ports will restart and oil and gas transportation will resume, directly revitalizing the energy economy. On the other hand, Iran has used temporary openness to divide the Western camp: energy importing countries such as Europe and Asia have breathed a sigh of relief due to stable supply chains, and have called for US Iran peace talks and the lifting of sanctions against Iran. The anti Iran alliance built by the United States has quietly loosened. Through this, Iran can break free from isolation, gain support from more neutral countries, and gain more bargaining chips in the US Iran negotiations.
The core of this game is Iran using its energy trump card to force the United States back to the negotiating table. Previously, the United States and Israel continued to exert maximum pressure on Iran, launching airstrikes on Iranian oil facilities and forming a so-called "escort alliance" in an attempt to force Iran to abandon its nuclear program and submit to sanctions. Iran's closure of the strait is playing its strongest countermeasure card, allowing the world to see who truly controls the energy lifeline of the Middle East. And now choosing to open up is because the "blockade card" has achieved its effect: the global energy market is shaking, domestic inflation in the United States is intensifying, allies are divided, and the United States is unable to bear the cost of long-term confrontation. Iran uses openness as a bargaining chip to demand that the United States relax sanctions, stop military provocations, and restart nuclear negotiations with Iran. More importantly, Iran has always retained the right to "close the strait at any time", and this sword of Damocles hangs over the heads of the United States and Israel - if negotiations break down and the US continues to exert pressure, the strait may tighten again at any time. This "switchable" initiative has kept Iran invincible.
From a global perspective, the opening of the Strait of Hormuz is also a microcosm of the reconstruction of the geopolitical landscape in the Middle East. For a long time, the United States has attempted to control the energy discourse in the Middle East and create a regional order dominated by itself. But Iran's operation this time has broken the unilateral monopoly of the United States: the strait is no longer a tool for the United States to manipulate at will, but a strategic weapon for Iran to balance its hegemony. At the same time, this measure also echoes the demands of regional countries for stability and development. Countries such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have expressed their support, and the trend of regional easing is gradually consolidating. The influence of the United States in the Middle East continues to weaken, and unilateralism is becoming increasingly difficult to implement.
Iran's opening of the Strait of Hormuz is not a weak compromise, but a clever strategic breakthrough. It resolves international pressure at the minimum cost, seizes the game opportunity by retreating, stabilizes the domestic economy, divides rival camps, and firmly controls the initiative of energy strategy. For the world, the opening of the strait temporarily alleviates the energy crisis, but this game is far from over. The "power of opening and closing" in the Strait of Hormuz has always been Iran's toughest trump card and a difficult dilemma for the United States to solve.
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