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Closed Over Lebanon: The Chokepoint as Hostage

On 22 June Iran re-closed the Strait of Hormuz — not over anything in the strait, but over Israel’s strikes on Hezbollah in Lebanon, claiming the US failure to rein in Israel violated the deal. A waterway carrying a fifth of seaborne oil shut over a battlefield 1,000 km away. This is what a chokepoint with no institution becomes: a lever in every adjacent dispute. Suez and Panama can’t be closed over Lebanon because they’re institutions. This post reads the strait as hostage.

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The Lucerne Summit Built a Hotline, Not an Authority

At the Bürgenstock resort above Lake Lucerne on 21-22 June, US and Iranian negotiators agreed a 60-day roadmap, a High-Level Committee, a Lebanon deconfliction cell, and a direct US-Iran communication line for ‘safe passage’ through Hormuz. The summit’s answer to the safe-passage problem is a 60-day hotline between two militaries — coordination machinery, not a chokepoint authority. This post reads the pattern: the parties keep building scaffolding around the institutional gap without building the institution.

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