The Strait of Hormuz is the kind of choke point people talk about in theory, right up until it closes and the whole global economy starts to feel it. We’re joined by Ambassador Chas Freeman, a veteran American diplomat, to make sense of the US-Iran ceasefire drama and the bigger reality underneath it: Iran is not looking for a new ultimatum, and Washington is struggling to offer anything that resembles real negotiations.
We dig into why “maximum pressure” often produces the opposite of its stated goals, including the risk that repeated attacks convince Tehran it needs a nuclear deterrent. We also break down the Strait of Hormuz blockade and why it can fail strategically and legally while still harming allies who rely on Gulf transit. Along the way, we talk oil price whiplash, credibility problems, and the downstream effects that show up weeks later in refineries, inflation, fertilizer, and gas at the pump.
From East Asia blowback to the question of how a Trump-Xi summit would actually play out, the through line is simple: diplomacy is a craft, and the costs of amateur-hour statecraft land on everyone. If you care about US foreign policy, global energy security, and how wars end, this conversation is for you.
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