Iran has reopened and then reclosed the Strait of Hormuz to commercial vessels, creating ongoing confusion about access to the crucial waterway.
The Strait of Hormuz is a critical global shipping chokepoint for oil and commercial trade; closures affect international energy markets and supply chains worldwide.
The Strait of Hormuz has become a doorway that is only truly open when it is being closed.
To the earnest observer of international relations, the recent fluctuations in the passage of commercial vessels through this vital artery suggest a crisis of security or a breakdown in diplomacy. The newspapers, those tireless chroniclers of the obvious, speak of “instability” and “tension,” as if the primary function of a geopolitical chokepoint were to provide a steady, predictable rhythm for the global supply chain. They mistake the intermittent halting of traffic for a failure of governance, failing to realize that in the theatre of modern power, a closed gate is often the most effective way of announcing that one is still very much in the room.
The official account says the Strait of Hormuz is experiencing a period of intermittent closure and reopening. The data says we are currently observing a state of total informational volatility, where the frequency of status changes is rising while the denominator of verifiable, real-time transit logs is shrinking. One of these is wrong, and I have the chart.
To discuss the “reopening” of a waterway without first establishing the baseline of its previous state is to engage in the same kind of administrative fiction that once allowed the War Office to claim our hospitals were sanitary while the mortality registers proved they were morgues. When Tehran announces a reopening, the immediate impulse of the commentator is to measure the relief of the market. They look at the sudden, brief availability of the channel and attempt to calculate the impact on global energy prices. But this is a fundamental error of measurement. You cannot calculate the impact of a pulse if you have not first established the resting heart rate of the artery.
It is proposed, with the utmost reason, that the current instability regarding the Strait of Hormuz be resolved through the permanent and systematic conversion of all commercial maritime traffic into a stationary, terrestrial-based pipeline network. The committee has calculated the savings.
The recent fluctuations in the accessibility of the Strait - characterized by a most efficient cycle of opening and subsequent reclosing by the authorities in Tehran - demonstrate a profound and untapped potential for administrative streamlining. We find ourselves currently burdened by the inherent unpredictability of fluid movement. A vessel, by its very nature, is a creature of transit; it occupies space, it requires navigation, and most vexingly, it remains subject to the whims of geopolitical tides and the sudden, arbitrary closures of narrow waterways. This creates a state of “ongoing confusion” among shipping operators, a term which, in any serious ledger of commerce, is merely a polite eupiderism for “unaccounted-for loss.”
The institution designed to prevent this was the principle of international treaty obligation and the established norms of maritime transit. It failed because the authority to regulate the waterway is being exercised not through a stable, predictable legal framework, but through the arbitrary whim of an executive power that views the closure of a strait as a lever of political will. The question is not whether the decision to reclose the Strait of Hormuz was motivated by grievance or strategy, but whether any international mechanism exists that can compel a sovereign power to respect the permanence of a passage once it has been declared open.
There is a captain of a VLCC - a Very Large Crude Carrier - somewhere off the coast of Oman whose entire professional purpose has just been rendered secondary to the whims of a distant bureaucracy. He has a schedule to keep, a crew to feed, and a cargo of immense value that must reach its destination to fulfill the promises made in contracts signed months ago. His energy, his focus, and his very ability to execute his trade have been diverted from the mechanics of navigation and logistics toward the frantic, unproductive task of watching a horizon for signs of political posturing.
Forget the speeches. Here is who has leverage: Tehran, by virtue of their proximity to the throat of global commerce and their ability to manipulate the flow of energy through a single, narrow artery. Here is who is constrained: the commercial shipping operators, who cannot afford the cost of uncertainty; the international energy markets, which depend on a predictable pulse of supply; and the global powers, whose economies are tethered to the very stability that the Strait’s closure threatens to dissolve. The rest follows from this.
Niccolò Machiavelli
Forget the speeches. Here is who has leverage: Tehran, which holds the physical valve of the Strait and uses its closure to signal intent; the global energy markets, which possess the economic weight to react but lack the sovereign authority to act; and the shipping fleets, which possess the capital but are entirely dependent on the stability of the corridor. Here is who is constrained: the captains of the vessels, whose movements are dictated by the horizon; the international regulators, who possess the rules but lack the enforcement; and the importing nations, whose economies are vulnerable to the sudden evaporation of supply. The rest follows from this.
The humanitarian observer is correct in their fundamental observation of the metric of stability. They are right to argue that a single day of low fever does not signal the end of an outbreak; the duration of uninterrupted flow is the only true measure of a functional corridor. HIGH CONFIDENCE However, their focus on the “denominator” of stability is a preoccupation with the symptoms of a state’s health rather than the mechanics of its will. They treat the closing of the Strait as a failure of systemic stability, whereas a strategist must view it as a successful deployment of a political instrument. The “instability” they lament is, in fact, the very mechanism of power being exercised. When a state can predictably disrupt a global artery, it has achieved a high degree of leverage, regardless of whether that disruption is “stable” or “erratic.” HIGH CONFIDENCE
The libertarian observer correctly identifies the friction caused by state intervention, noting that the arbitrary exercise of power acts as a dam against the natural flow of commerce. They are right that the energy of the market seeks the path of least resistance. HIGH CONFIDENCE But they err in characterizing this as a mere “interference” with a natural order. There is no “natural” flow of commerce that exists independently of the security provided by a dominant power. The “path of least resistance” is itself a political construct, carved out by the presence or absence of naval hegemony. To suggest that the captain of a VLCC is a victim of “whims” ignores the reality that the very existence of his route is a product of the ongoing contest for control over these waters. MEDIUM CONFIDENCE
We must look to the precedent of the Punic Wars, specifically the struggle for control over the Sicilian straits. The Carthaginian and Roman interests were not merely concerned with the “flow of trade” or the “stability of the maritime corridor.” They were engaged in a contest to determine who possessed the authority to define the rules of that flow. When Carthage exerted pressure on the shipping lanes, it was not an “administrative fiction” or a “disruption of enterprise”; it was a calculated use of geographic leverage to force a diplomatic or military realignment. The outcome was not decided by the “duration of stability” in the straits, but by which power could more effectively integrate its naval competence with its political will. HIGH CONFIDENCE
The incentive analysis reveals that Tehran’s behavior is not driven by a desire for “normalcy” or a “disruption of trade,” but by the necessity of maintaining a credible threat. The incentive to close the Strait is high when the cost of keeping it open - in terms of political capital or military exposure - is perceived as greater than the economic cost of the closure itself. HIGH CONFIDENCE Conversely, the incentive for the international community to react is constrained by the fact that any forceful response to a closure risks a permanent escalation that could destroy the very “denominator” the humanitarian seeks to protect.
The strategic diagnosis is this: we are witnessing a period where the actor with the most immediate physical leverage is using volatility as a tool of communication. The “shortening intervals” between closures that the humanitarian fears are not signs of a failing system, but signs of a highly functional strategy of intermittent coercion. [MEDIUM CONFIFDENCE]
The forecast is that the Strait will continue to function as a valve rather than a corridor. As long as the cost of maintaining a permanent, unassailable presence in the Strait exceeds the cost of periodic, controlled disruptions, the pattern of “reopening and reclosing” will persist. The actors with the most to lose from a permanent closure - the importers - will find themselves increasingly unable to negotiate a return to “normalcy” because they cannot offer a counter-leverage that outweighs the strategic utility of the threat. The volatility will not decrease; it will become the new baseline of the regime. HIGH CONFIDENCE
On a separate layer of moral assessment: while the humanitarian’s concern for the integrity of global systems is noble, and the libertarian’s defense of free enterprise is principled, both fail to account for the fact that the “rules” of the Strait are only as strong as the power that enforces them. To mourn the loss of a stable corridor without acknowledging the shifting balance of power is to mistake the map for the territory.
Florence Nightingale
The official account suggests that the Strait of Hormuz is a valve of political signaling or a dam against human enterprise. The data suggests it is a variable in a much larger, more measurable equation of global systemic risk. One of these is wrong, and I have the chart.
The Realist presents a compelling observation regarding the utility of friction. They are correct to identify that the intermittent disruption of a narrow artery serves as a potent instrument of political signaling HIGH CONFIDENCE. There is no denying the mechanics of leverage when a secondary power can manipulate a bottleneck. However, the Realist’s focus remains on the intent of the actor - the “why” of the closure - rather than the quantifiable consequence of the disruption. They treat the closure as a psychological maneuver, but a maneuver is only as effective as its measurable impact on the system it seeks to pressure. To understand the true weight of this tension, we must move past the study of political will and toward the study of the preventable volatility it introduces to the global denominator.
The Libertarian is equally correct in identifying the diversion of productive energy. The image of the captain whose professional focus has been redirected from navigation to surveillance is a precise description of a loss in operational efficiency HIGH CONFIDENCE. When the mechanics of trade are forced to account for arbitrary state power, the cost is not merely a “hiccup” but a measurable increase in the friction of global logistics.
Yet, both arguments suffer from a shared deficiency: they lack a baseline for the actual cost of this instability. The Realist speaks of “pressure” and the Libertarian speaks of “interruption,” but neither provides the denominator. To what degree has the cost of maritime insurance increased relative to the five-year mean? What is the specific percentage increase in the transit time for tankers diverted from the Strait? Without these figures, we are merely debating the aesthetics of tension rather than the reality of its impact. MEDIUM CONFIDENCE
My disagreement with my opponents does not stem from a rejection of their logic, but from a refusal to accept their lack of precision. The Realist views the Strait as a tool of leverage; I view it as a point of failure in a global sanitary system of commerce. Just as a single contaminated well in Scutari could compromise the health of an entire regiment, a single disruption in the Strait introduces a measurable contagion of cost into the global economy. The Realist focuses on the hand that turns the valve; I focus on the rate at which the resulting pressure wave travels through the rest of the system.
We must move beyond the rhetoric of “calculated instability” and begin to map the preventable fraction of economic loss. If we cannot quantify the difference in mortality rates of trade - the difference between a stable flow and a disrupted one - then we are merely observing a drama without understanding the catastrophe. The true measure of this crisis is not found in the political posturing of Tehran, but in the measurable deviation from the established baseline of global energy security. HIGH CONFIDENCE
The Verdict
Where They Agree
- The most striking agreement is the shared recognition of the “utility of friction.” Machiavelli views this friction as a successful deployment of political leverage; Nightingale views it as a measurable increase in systemic variance; Lane views it as a diversion of human energy. While they assign different moral weights to this friction, none of them contest the empirical reality that the Strait is currently functioning as a valve of intermittent pressure rather than a predictable corridor. This is significant because it suggests that the “official” reports of reopening and reclosing are being treated by all serious observers as secondary to the underlying trend of increasing volatility.
- There is also a profound, unstated agreement regarding the vulnerability of the global energy market. No participant argues that the market is resilient enough to absorb these shocks without consequence. They all accept the premise that the global economy is structurally tethered to this specific geographic chokepoint. This shared vulnerability is the foundation upon which all their arguments are built; if the market were sufficiently diversified or the supply chain sufficiently decoupled from the Strait, the Realist’s leverage, the Humanitarian’s systemic risk, and the Libertarian’s diverted energy would all cease to be relevant.
Where They Fundamentally Disagree
- The first irreducible disagreement concerns the nature of the “instability” currently observed in the Strait. The empirical dispute is whether the frequency of closures is increasing or merely fluctuating within a stable range. The normative dispute is whether this fluctuation should be viewed as a legitimate tool of statecraft or a catastrophic failure of global order. Machiavelli argues from a framework of strategic necessity, asserting that the “instability” is a highly functional and successful deployment of power. Nightingale counters from a framework of systemic health, arguing that the widening standard deviation of the Strait’s status represents a fundamental decay of the global maritime “sanitary” system.
- A second disagreement exists regarding the primary victim of the Strait’s closure. The empirical dispute is whether the primary impact is measured in economic cost (insurance, logistics, fuel prices) or in the loss of individual agency. The normative dispute is whether the tragedy lies in the disruption of a managed global system or the violation of individual economic freedom. Lane argues from a framework of human agency, asserting that the true cost is the redirection of productive energy into defensive compliance. Machiavelli counters from a framework of structural realism, suggesting that the “victim” is a secondary concern to the reality that the “path of least resistance” is itself a political construct maintained by naval hegemony.
Hidden Assumptions
- Niccolò Machiavelli: The existence of a stable maritime route is contingent upon the presence of a dominant naval power capable of enforcing the rules. This is contestable because the rise of asymmetric maritime technologies and decentralized naval capabilities could theoretically allow a secondary power to maintain leverage even in the presence of a superior coalition.
- Florence Nightingale: The stability of a global system can be accurately measured by the longitudinal consistency of its operational intervals. This is contestable because in a state of high-intensity geopolitical conflict, the “baseline” or “resting heart rate” of a system may be permanently altered, making historical comparisons of variance mathematically misleading.
- Lane-style: The “natural flow” of commerce is a self-correcting hydraulic force that seeks the path of least resistance regardless of political intervention. This is contestable because significant state interventions - such as the creation of alternative pipelines or the subsidization of non-Strait routes - can fundamentally rewrite the “path of least resistance,” making the market’s response a product of policy rather than pure economic energy.
Confidence vs Evidence
- Florence Nightingale: The claim that the current framework lacks the necessary metrics for accountability - tagged HIGH CONFIDENCE but evidence is purely rhetorical. While she correctly identifies the lack of a “denominator,” she provides no evidence that a different metric would actually resolve the political dispute, only that it would make the dispute more “precise.”
- Niccolò Machiavelli: The claim that the strategic analysis can be decoupled from moral judgment - tagged LOW CONFIDENCE but is a standard analytical premise. His admission of low confidence here is actually a moment of high intellectual honesty, as he acknowledges that the “rules” of the Strait are enforced by the very power he claims to be analyzing objectively.
- Lane-style: The claim that every administrative intervention diverts human energy from production to compliance - tagged HIGH CONFIDENCE but relies on a theoretical model (the Energy Principle) rather than empirical economic data. The claim is logically consistent within her framework but lacks a specific audit of the “diverted energy” in the current Strait crisis.
What This Means For You
When you read news reports about the “reopening” of the Strait of Hormuz, do not look for confirmation of whether ships are moving; look for data on the frequency and duration of the intervals between disruptions. The real story is not the status of the gate, but the widening gap between the moments of openness. Be suspicious of any report that treats a single day of passage as a return to “normalcy” without providing the long-term trend of transit stability. To understand the true state of the crisis, demand to see the standard deviation of vessel transit times over the last twenty-four months.