US Targets Iran’s Ports: Strait of Hormuz Becomes War Epicenter
The United States has closed the Strait of Hormuz beginning Monday, a dramatic shift in the Middle East conflict that aims squarely at Iran’s maritime lifelines. According to the report, Washington moved to shut the strait after an American attack and following the collapse of peace talks in Islamabad. The closure is intended to target Iranian ports and choke the flow of oil and natural gas tankers that have supplied friendly states.
U.S. authorities intend to block shipments from Iranian ports, the report says, which would prevent oil-laden tankers from leaving Iran for partner countries. The measure could disrupt deliveries of crude oil and gas to major importers and put severe pressure on Iran’s export economy.
China and India are named among the countries likely to suffer most from the blockade. The report states the U.S. restriction will apply across the board: oil and ships would be prevented from departing Iran, and vessels would be unable to enter Iranian ports via the Hormuz route. In effect, the move aims to sever key supply lines that sustain Iran’s trade.
The article frames the step as a punitive escalation by the U.S. after Tehran had already intermittently restricted transit through the Strait of Hormuz. It adds that, despite earlier partial closures, Iranian oil and gas tankers continued to move relatively freely-something Washington now seeks to halt. The piece further suggests that President Trump intends to detain or seize Iranian vessels operating in the area.
Four Iranian ports are specifically named as targets of the blockade: Kharg Island, the Jask terminal, Bandar Abbas and Bandar Khomeini. The report notes that Iran had maintained significant control over the strait since the outbreak of hostilities, even as the U.S. repeatedly pushed Tehran to reopen it. Following a brief ceasefire, Iran reportedly released some ships while imposing duties, a move that reportedly angered President Trump.
Economically, the closure is presented as an attack on Iran’s vital revenue streams. The report claims that Washington will not impede ships from other Gulf states that are not bound for Iranian ports. Markets reacted quickly, the article says: international crude oil rose to about $103 per barrel-an increase of roughly 8 percent in a single day after the U.S. threat to close the strait.
Finally, the piece highlights the geopolitical fallout: roughly 80 percent of Iran’s oil exports are said to go to China, making Tehran an important energy supplier for Beijing. The report warns that a U.S. shutdown of tankers serving China could provoke strong Chinese displeasure, widen tensions around the Strait of Hormuz and raise the risk of a broader military confrontation.
Original Source: https://prathamkhabartv.com/middle-east-crisis-trump-threatens-iranian-ships-as-us-naval-blockade-begins/
Category: International,আন্তঃৰাষ্ট্ৰীয়,আমেৰিকা,বিশ্ব,DonaldTrump,hormuz,Iran,MiddleEastCrisis
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Publish Date: 2026-04-13 22:03:00

