How Iran’s ‘golden weapon’ of Hormuz became a bigger priority than its nuclear program
Iran has increasingly prioritized control over the Strait of Hormuz, viewing it as a strategic 'golden weapon' to exert influence over the West. This shift in focus has led to recent military escalations with the United States, potentially jeopardizing interim peace agreements.
DUBAI - Control over the Strait of Hormuz has become a “golden weapon” to Iran, for which it is willing to risk new escalations with the United States, and is a bigger priority than a nuclear program for which it accepted decades of sanctions.So central is the issue to Iranian strategy that ships passing the Strait without Tehran’s approval were fired upon this week, leading to an exchange of fire with the United States that threatens last month’s interim peace deal.Iranian leaders, who had demurred for years from choking off the fifth of global energy supplies passing through Hormuz, now see it as their strongest card in a host of disputes with the West, and the reason Washington ended the war.
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