The Strait of Hormuz is one of the world's most
strategically important maritime passages. A substantial portion of global
energy supplies and commercial cargo passes through it every day. Ensuring its
safety is therefore essential, but geography cannot be ignored. Iran and Oman
are the two littoral states that share the Strait. They have the greatest stake in maintaining peace,
stability and uninterrupted maritime traffic.
Iran has consistently maintained that the security of the
Strait should remain the responsibility of the countries bordering it. That
position deserves serious consideration. History has shown that the involvement of outside
military powers often complicates regional disputes instead of resolving them.
The deployment of multinational naval forces may appear reassuring to some, but
it can also intensify strategic competition and increase the risk of
confrontation.
It is also difficult to believe that Britain and France are
acting entirely on their own. Their initiative appears to reflect a broader Western security strategy
in which the United States prefers to remain in the background while its
closest allies take the lead. Whether this perception is accurate or
not, it is one that many countries in the region are likely to share.
If Iran and Oman are expected to shoulder the responsibility
of safeguarding one of the world's busiest maritime corridors, then
responsibility and compensation should go hand in hand. Maintaining maritime
surveillance, search-and-rescue services, navigation support and security
infrastructure requires significant financial resources.
It is
therefore reasonable to argue that Iran and Oman should be entitled to levy a
regulated transit toll on commercial vessels using the Strait to recover the
cost of providing this essential international service.
The Strait of Hormuz belongs to its geography before it
belongs to global geopolitics. Lasting maritime security will be achieved not
through the presence of foreign warships, but by recognizing the primary
responsibility—and the corresponding rights—of Iran and Oman.
