Gulf Insider
It’s one of those things that sounds nice on paper, but when missiles and drones are inbound, no one is going to want to be on a military ship sitting in the middle of the Strait of Hormuz: the United Arab Emirates, which has been among the hardest-impacted Gulf states in Iran’s ongoing retaliation, is pressing for a multinational maritime taskforce to reopen vital oil transit waterway, the Financial Times reports Friday. The UAE, with a navy that’s not really going to strike fear into any enemy (much less the Iranians), says it is willing to participate in a “Hormuz Security Force” to defend the strait and escort shipping. Dozens of countries are being asked to join, sources cited in FT say. And yet for all the public posturing and signing of ‘symbolic statements’ – not a single country with a strong military has actually stepped up with a concrete offer to provide warships and military assets (other than Israel, which is a direct party to the war). This is despite that for much of the past month of the war immense pressure has been exerted on allies by the Trump administration. But by and large they’ve shrugged and have said “this is […]
Go to News Site