The United States’ long-running pressure campaign against Iran raises a harder question: when does coercion begin to disrupt the global order? After decades of sanctions, the central objective remains unmet—Iran has not abandoned its nuclear program. Yet Washington appears to be escalating, moving beyond economic pressure toward actions that constrain passage through the Strait of Hormuz.
The demand
that Iran halt uranium enrichment remains contested. As a signatory to the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, Iran retains the right to
peaceful nuclear activity. Critics cite compliance and inspection concerns, but
dismissing treaty entitlements outright risks eroding the credibility of the
very frameworks meant to regulate nuclear conduct.
Washington
justifies its posture through deterrence and regional security. Yet
restrictions on Hormuz carry systemic consequences—disrupting energy flows,
constraining oil exporters, and imposing costs on major importers such as
China, turning a bilateral dispute into a broader geo-economic contest.
Equally
significant is the human dimension. Merchant vessels and seafarers become
entangled in strategic signaling, raising concerns about proportionality under
maritime norms.
Framed as
strategy, such measures still function as instruments of pressure on civilian
economies and global trade—effectively turning blockade into a weapon that
demands closer legal and academic scrutiny.

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