Could Russia Follow the “Hormuz Playbook” in the Baltic and Black Seas?
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
On the eve of the U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran, 56 tankers sailed through the Strait of Hormuz. Two days later, Lloyd’s List, the maritime industry’s journal of record, counted just seven tankers and a single gas carrier — all small and three of them shadow-fleet vessels — with hundreds more drifting in the Gulf of Oman. One of the world’s most important maritime chokepoints had not been mined, blockaded, or seized by a navy. Rather, it had been priced shut by a handful of drone strikes and the insurance market.Within two days of the first U.S.-Israeli strikes on Feb. 28, The post Could Russia Follow the “Hormuz Playbook” in the Baltic and Black Seas? appeared first on War on the Rocks.