Global South

Trump threatens Iran with US takeover, tolling in Strait of Hormuz


President Donald Trump said Monday that the United States would likely take control of the Strait of Hormuz and should be compensated for overseeing the strategic waterway.

“We’re going to keep the strait and ⁠we’ll probably run it. We’ll become ⁠the guardian of the strait. Maybe we’ll call it the guardian angel of the strait. And we should be reimbursed ​for that,” he said in a phone interview ​on ⁠Fox News’ “Fox & Friends” program.

Control of the Strait of Hormuz, a vital route for global oil supplies, has become one of the main battlegrounds of the conflict. Iran’s effective blockade of the strait has pushed up energy prices and increased concerns about inflation globally.

“We’re going to guard it. We’re going to get paid for guarding it – a lot of money,” Trump said. “We’re going to be reimbursed, because the other nations are very wealthy. They’re on our side, and we can’t be ⁠expected ⁠to do that for nothing,” he said.

After announcing the waterway’s closure Saturday following what it described as an unauthorized transit, Tehran said Sunday that passage remained suspended and that permits would be issued once “stability and calm” were restored.

“We had a deal. It was a done deal, and then they broke it. They always break it. We’ve had 10 deals with these people, and so we’re ⁠just going to hit them very hard,” Trump said.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said in a statement Monday that the only way to restore regular shipping traffic ​through the strait was to end U.S. military interventions in the waterway and warned ​that “continued interference could lead to greater incidents in the global oil and gas sector.”

U.S. and Iranian forces exchanged heavy missile ⁠and ‌drone attacks over ‌the weekend and into Monday, with Tehran ⁠saying it had struck U.S. military facilities across ‌the Gulf and kept the Strait of Hormuz closed, driving oil prices higher.

The latest ​exchanges mark a sharp ⁠escalation in both the pace and geographic reach of ⁠attacks over the past week, casting doubt on an interim U.S.-Iranian ⁠agreement signed last ​month to reopen the strait and halt hostilities while the sides pursued a further 60 days of negotiations.

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ARIF NSN

Muhammad Arif is a journalist repoting on Asian Affairs, with focus on connectivity in Eurasia. He holds Ph.D degree on Global Journalism from HBU, China, he teaches journalism at a university in Islamabad. He has language skills Chinese, Persian, Russian.
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