The Gulf Confrontation Is Not About Hormuz
From Shyam Bhatia
London, April 20, 2026. At first glance, this confrontation looks like it is about oil.
Tankers diverted. Insurance premiums spiking. Warships shadowing commercial vessels. An Iranian Revolutionary Guard commander declaring in early March that “the strait is closed — if anyone tries to pass, the heroes of the Revolutionary Guards and the regular navy will set those ships ablaze.”
The Strait of Hormuz — through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply passes — has once again become the focal point of global anxiety.
But this is a misreading.
Hormuz is not the cause of the crisis. It is the pressure point.
The real issue lies inland, buried beneath rock, steel and secrecy: Iran’s nuclear programme.
That is not conjecture. It is the consistent position of the United States and its allies, repeated across administrations for more than two decades. The White House recently documented the consistency of that position with unusual directness. President Trump has stated, across multiple occasions, that “Iran will never be permitted to obtain a nuclear weapon”— a position the White House describes as “rooted in longstanding, bipartisan American policy.”
Most recently, following Operation Epic Fury, Trump stated that the operation was intended “to obliterate Iran’s missiles and production, annihilate its navy, sever its support for terrorist proxies, and ensure it never acquires a nuclear weapon.”
The language varies in texture. The objective does not.
The technical picture underpinning that political position is stark. Iran is the only NPT non-nuclear-weapon state to have produced and accumulated uranium enriched up to 60 percent U-235 — of which it had accumulated 440.9 kg by the time of the military attacks in mid-June 2025.
The IAEA has confirmed that enriching this stockpile to weapons-grade — 90 percent — would require completing only a fraction of the work already done. The separative work required to further enrich Iran’s 60-percent stockpile to weapons-grade is only about one percent of the 55,330 separative work units already committed.
In other words, 99 percent of the technical journey to a bomb has already been completed.
The IAEA’s monitoring picture is correspondingly grave. In its February 2026 report, the Agency noted that its lack of access to verify previously declared highly enriched uranium — for over eight months — is “a matter of proliferation concern.”
Director General Rafael Grossi, speaking in Seoul just days ago, warned that without IAEA inspectors on the ground, any diplomatic agreement would be hollow: “You will not have an agreement — you will have an illusion of an agreement.”
Those are not political statements. They are technical findings with strategic consequences.
Against that backdrop, the focus on Hormuz begins to look like a distraction.
Iran cannot match the United States militarily. But it does not need to. It relies instead on asymmetric leverage — above all, geography. In the days before the February 2026 strikes, war-risk ship insurance premiums for the strait increased from 0.125 percent to between 0.2 and 0.4 percent of the ship insurance value per transit — an increase of a quarter of a million dollars for very large oil tankers.
Disrupt that flow, and the consequences are immediate. A forced slowdown or outright closure would immediately remove more barrels from the market than the 1973 and 1979 oil shocks combined.
That is why Iranian officials have repeatedly signalled their ability to interfere with shipping. The threat itself moves markets and concentrates minds.
But this is leverage, not an objective.
Hormuz is the instrument Iran uses to raise the cost of external pressure on its nuclear programme. It forces energy-dependent economies — Europe, China, India, Japan — to factor global economic disruption into their strategic calculations. China, India, Japan, and South Korea together accounted for 69 percent of all Hormuz crude oil and condensate flows in 2024.
For New Delhi in particular, the stakes are compound: India imports a significant share of its crude from the Gulf, millions of Indian citizens live across the region, and India’s strategic interest ultimately aligns with preventing nuclear proliferation in its extended neighbourhood.
This linkage between energy vulnerability and nuclear risk is precisely why Hormuz commands such attention.
But it is not where the argument begins.
The deeper contest is defined by time. From Washington’s perspective, the goal is to prevent Iran from reaching a nuclear threshold. From Tehran’s perspective, that threshold is precisely what would guarantee regime survival. This is the central tension — and it explains why no negotiation has resolved it. Talks stall not over maritime security, but over irreconcilable positions on enrichment, verification and long-term capability.
Grossi himself made the point with precision in June 2025, addressing the UN Security Council in the immediate aftermath of the Israeli strikes: “A diplomatic solution is within reach if the necessary political will is there. Elements for an agreement have been discussed. The IAEA can guarantee, through a watertight inspections system, that nuclear weapons will not be developed in Iran.”
That framing — inspections as the indispensable element — is significant. It suggests that the crisis is solvable, but only if verification is placed at the centre of any agreement. Without it, any deal is cosmetic.
So why does Hormuz dominate the headlines?
Because oil is visible, immediate and measurable. Nuclear capability is not. A detained tanker produces images and price shocks. A shift in uranium enrichment levels does not. A naval standoff can be tracked in real time. A reduction in inspection access is buried in technical reports.
Media logic gravitates toward spectacle. Strategy operates in the background.
But misreading the conflict has consequences. If policymakers treat the situation as an energy crisis, they may succeed in stabilising markets without addressing the underlying issue. Tankers move again. Prices settle. But the nuclear programme — whatever remains of it — continues.
The cycle then repeats. Tensions rise. Pressure is applied. Iran signals through Hormuz. Markets react. Diplomacy resumes. Temporary relief is achieved. Then the process begins again — at a higher level of accumulated risk.
In that sense, Hormuz is not the centre of gravity. It is the signalling mechanism.
The real issue — the one that will determine whether this confrontation stabilises or metastasises — is whether Iran retains a credible path to nuclear weapons capability, and whether the United States and its allies are prepared to close it through diplomacy, force, or both.
Everything else is secondary.
The Strait of Hormuz matters enormously. But only because it allows Iran to force the world to confront the issue it would otherwise prefer to defer.
This is not a confrontation about oil routes.
It is about nuclear capability, deterrence, and the balance of risk in one of the world’s most volatile regions.