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The National Interest - Does Iran Hold All the Cards in the Strait of Hormuz? - May 15, 2026 - By: Paul J. Saunders

 The National Interest 

Does Iran Hold All the Cards in the Strait of Hormuz?

May 15, 2026

By: Paul J. Saunders



Like Russia before it, Iran is learning that using the prospect of an oil crisis as a threat no longer works after the crisis begins.

In the wake of reports that China is planning covert arms deliveries to Iran, President Donald Trump claims to have secured his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping’s commitment to forgo arming America’s wartime adversary. Meanwhile, the United States and Iran are continuing a half-hearted cease-fire alongside half-hearted talks. Leaders on each side see the ticking clock as a powerful ally, and hope that their leverage will grow as economic pressure saps their foe’s political will.


Trump does not hold as many cards as he hoped in order to coerce Iran’s leaders, whoever they might be, to accept his terms for an end to the war, Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz, and the US termination of a naval blockade of Iran. Yet neither do Iran’s leaders hold all the cards. More importantly, playing cards is more complicated than merely holding them. Trump, who recently compared the world to a casino, probably gets this. Do his Iranian counterparts?


You Can’t Have Your Cards and Play Them, Too 

The thing about playing cards is that, once you play a card, you no longer have it. Russian President Vladimir Putin learned this lesson, quite expensively for Russia, in attempting to use his country’s vast pipeline gas exports to Europe as political leverage following Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Before Russia mostly cut off its pipeline gas supplies later that year, Putin had considerable leverage over Europe. After he did so, European leaders adapted to this new reality—and Putin’s leverage largely evaporated.


The Russian move was painful for Europe. But Russia forced Europe to create a new energy system, which it is doing. Russia lost what had been its largest and most profitable market for natural gas, and it has not made up for the lost volume or found other customers willing to pay the same price. Europeans are paying more for energy, but they are surviving without Russian gas, and they are unlikely to ever again buy as much as they did in 2021. Some European leaders have lost their jobs, but Europe continues to arm and fund Ukraine four years later.


From this perspective, Iran’s leaders—many of whom assert excellence at the “chess” of international diplomacy—would do well to think again about card-playing.


Oil and gas are different commodities and their markets operate differently. Oil is much easier than gas (especially pipeline gas) to deliver to various markets, although its characteristics and purpose-built refineries do impose limits. What is important is that the global energy system is coping with, but not yet adapting to, the loss of oil exports through the Strait of Hormuz. The distinction is an important one. 

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Many have already discussed what could occur in US and international markets when coping mechanisms, like using working reserves at refineries and strategic stockpile releases to manage the oil supply gap, are no longer sustainable. While estimates vary, all agree that oil prices will skyrocket and oil products will become unavailable for some current uses. This will affect supplies of gasoline, diesel, and aviation fuel, as well as inputs in manufacturing plastics, semiconductors, and other ubiquitous products.


Iran’s leaders appear to believe that Trump’s fear of this outcome and its possible domestic political consequences will drive him toward the settlement they want. If they play this card—that is, if they create a global oil crisis that imposes sufficiently high costs to force not only coping, but adapting—then Iran will lose its leverage much as Moscow did. It is a gamble of epic proportions.


A Prolonged Oil Crisis Could Be Disastrous for Iran

Worse for Tehran, using energy leverage in this way could produce political consequences in the United States like those that Russia’s actions generated in Europe: hardening positions and growing determination to win rather than to talk. What will be different is that the United States has one president, not 27 presidents and prime ministers; that it is already at war and not a mere spectator; that Americans who now see the war as optional will increasingly see it as necessary if Iranian intransigence continues; and that the United States has far greater military capabilities than Europe’s combined militaries (and Iran, for its part, is a less formidable adversary than Russia).


No one should want to cross the threshold that creates a true global oil crisis. Such a crisis will be costly for America and for the world. But it will be far worse for Iran and its leaders and people than for anyone else. Setting aside Iran’s already dire economic state, if the US president were less politically constrained than he is today—a state of affairs that could come about if a major oil crisis led to demands for him to “do something”—the United States will command escalation dominance at every step on the ladder. Some of Trump’s unfulfilled threats could become more realistic. He might find new international support for decisive action, too.


The bottom line is that a long-term shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz is a card, but is not a checkmate move. This doesn’t mean that administration officials can get everything they want from Tehran; if they negotiate successfully, the outcome will inherently be a compromise. What it does mean is that Iran’s leaders could face grave risks if they fail to secure an agreement with Washington before they force US and global economies to absorb lasting damage.


About the Author: Paul J. Saunders

Paul J. Saunders is president of the Center for the National Interest and publisher of The National Interest. His expertise spans US foreign and security policy, energy security and climate change, US-Russia relations and Russian foreign policy, and US relations with Japan and South Korea. Saunders is a senior advisor at the Energy Innovation Reform Project, where he served as president from 2019 to 2024. He has been a member of EIRP’s board of directors since 2013 and served as chairman from 2014 to 2019. At EIRP, Saunders has focused on the collision between great-power competition and the energy transition, including issues such as energy security, energy technology competition, and climate policy in a divided world. His recent projects at EIRP have included an assessment of Russia’s evolving role in the global energy system and a study of the linkages between China’s energy, climate, and national security policies.





Yazar: Murat Yetkin / 17 Mayıs 2026 - Mazlum Abdi İmralı’ya getirilip Öcalan’la görüştürüldü mü?

 

Mazlum Abdi İmralı’ya getirilip Öcalan’la görüştürüldü mü?

/ / Siyaset

Irak Kürt bölgesindeki haber sitesi PKK ve SDG yöneticilerinin İmralı’da Öcalan’la görüştürüldüğünü öne sürdü. Henüz bir açıklama yapılmadı. Fotoğrafta SDG lideri Mazlum Abdi, Suriye’de ABD’den tam destek aldığı günlerde ABD’nin Ankara Büyükelçisi Tom Barrack tarafından selamlanıyor. (Foto: Rudaw.net)


PKK’nın Suriye örgütlenmesinin başı Mazlum Abdi ve dış ilişkiler sorumlusu İlham Ahmed’in geçtiğimiz Mart ayında “Türkiye’nin hazırladığı bir kanal” yoluyla İmralı’da PKK lideri Abdullah Öcalan’la görüştürüldüğü haberi 12 Mayıs’ta Irak Kürdistan Bölgesi merkezli “Darka Mazi” sitesinde  yayınlandı. Darka Mazi, Irak Kürdistan Demokratik Partisi ile bağlantılı bir site. Aynı site 9 Mayıs yayınında da PKK yöneticilerinden Sabri Ok ve Bese Hozat’ın Haziran 2025’te gizlice İmralı’ya götürülüp Öcalan ile görüştürüldüğünü öne sürmüştü. İddiaya göre, örgüt adı Bese Hozat olan Hülya Oran bu görüşmeden bir süre sonra, 11 Temmuz’da Süleymaniye yakınlarında sembolik silah yakma töreninde başı çekti.
Sitedeki iddialara göre Öcalan SDG’lilere az kaldı, kendi kontrolünde değil, İsrail kontrolünde bir Kürt devleti kurulmasına alet oldukları için “fırça atmış”, kendilerini affettirmek için Terörsüz Türkiye projesi için çalışmalarını istemişti.

İki iddia, iki tartışma

Bu iddialar üzerine iki tartışma başladı.
• Bu isimler aranan teröristlerdi. Neden yakalanmak yerine” “teröristbaşı ile görüştürülmüşlerdi? Bu itirazlara karşı, gazeteci Fatih Altaylı, iddiaların doğru olduğu varsayımıyla “Devletler böyle işleri yapar. Ne var bunda?” mealinde bir yazı yazdı.
• İddiaların doğru olduğu varsayımıyla hem iktidar hem muhalefet saflarında süreç tartışması üzerine çıktı. Kimse sesini çıkarmak istemiyor ama özellikle AK Parti saflarında, tabandan gelen seslerin yankısı “Meclis yasaları PKK silah bırakmadan mı çıkaracak?” rahatsızlığına yol açtı.
Bu iki tartışma da iddiaların doğru olduğu varsayımına dayanıyor, ki elimizdeki tek bilgi KDP’ye yakın bu site.
Anladığım kadarıyla iktidar da muhalefet de böyle bir habere hazırmış. Bu da iddialar doğru olmasa bile, başarılı bir psikolojik operasyonla karşı karşıya olduğumuzu gösteriyor. Zaten haber sitesi de Mazlum Abdi’nin geçenlerde El Arabiya televizyonuna, “Yakında İmralı’da Öcalan’la görüşebileceğini” söylemesinin, aslında gerçekleşmiş görüşmeye kamuoyunu hazırlamayı amaçladığını öne sürmüş.
Peki, gerçekten bu tür görüşmeler oldu mu?

Öcalan’la görüştürüldüler mi?

Bu iki haberdeki iddiaların üç kurumsal muhatabı var.
Biri Cumhurbaşkanlığı. Cumhurbaşkanı Tayyip Erdoğan yürütmenin başı.
Diğeri Adalet Bakanlığı; cezaevlerinin yönetimi oraya bağlı. Haziran 2025’te yapıldığı öne sürülen görüşme sırasında bakan Yılmaz Tunç idi. Mart 2026’da yapıldığı iddia edilen görüşme sırasında da Akın Gürlek.
Üçüncüsü Milli İstihbarat Teşkilatı. Tüm Terörsüz Türkiye süreci İbrahim Kalın başkanlığında MİT koordinasyonunda yürütülüyor.
İddiaların üzerinden günler geçti, 17 Mayıs sabahı itibarıyla ne Cumhurbaşkanlığı İletişim Başkanlığının Dezenformasyonla Mücadele Merkezinden ne Adalet Bakanlığından ne MİT’den bir açıklama geldi. Gayriresmi yoldan “doğru değil” beyanları var, ama bu tür hassas bir konuda kamuoyunun daha net bilgilendirilmesinde fayda var.
Yalanlama gelmemesinin mutlaka doğruluğuna kanıt sayılmayacağını bilecek deneyimdeyim. Kaldı ki, yalanlanan nice haberin doğru olduğunun anlaşıldığı örnekler de verebilirim.
Ama bu durum eldeki verilerle parçaları birleştirmeye çalışmamıza engel değil.

İddiaların Son Gelişmelerdeki Yeri

• 29 Ocak: Şam’da Suriye hükümetiyle SDG arasında entegrasyon anlaşması imzalandı.
• 16 Şubat: DEM heyeti İmralı’da Öcalan’la görüştü.
• 18 Şubat: TBMM “Terörsüz Türkiye” raporunu yayınladı.
• Resmen doğrulanmayan iddiaya göre, PKK’daki örgüt adı Mazlum Abdi olan Ferhat Abdi Şahin ve İlham Ahmed, Mart ayında İmralı’da Öcalan’la görüştürüldüler. Darka Mazi sitesi daha önce Sabri Ok ve Hülya Oran’ın 5 Mayıs 2025 PKK fesih kongresi sonrasında, sembolik silah yakma töreni öncesinde Öcalan’la görüştürüldüğünü öne sürmüş; o iddia da ne yalanlanmış ne doğrulanmıştı.
• 28 Şubat: ABD ve İsrail, İran’a savaş başlattı. Özellikle İsrail kaynaklı olarak silahlı Kürt grupların İran rejimini devirmekte kara gücü olarak kullanılabileceği tezi ortaya atılmaya başlandı.
• 18 Mart: ABD’nin Ankara Büyükelçisi Tom Barrack, Türkiye’nin süreci yürütme şekline “hayranlık duyduğunu” ve Kürtlerin artık bölgede yaşadıkları dört ülkeye entegre olma zamanı geldiğini Erdoğan, Hakan Fidan ve İbrahim Kalın’ın adlarını anarak söyledi.
• 27 Mart: DEM heyeti İmralı’da Öcalan’la görüştü.

İran ve İsrail Boyutları

• 14 Nisan: Şara ve Ahmed, Şam’da Suriye Geçici Cumhurbaşkanı Ahmed Şara ve Dışişleri Bakanı Hasan Şeybani ile görüştüler. SDG, Suriye ordusu içinde eritilmeye başlandı.
• 17 Nisan: İsrail Başbakanı Binyamin Netanyahu ve Savunma Bakanı Yisrael Katz, Türkiye’yi tehdit eden beyanlarda bulundu. ABD’nin Kürt grupları Suriye’de olduğu gibi İran’da da kullanma planı rafa kalktı. ABD Başkanı Donald Trump “Kürtlere silah verdik ama kullanmadılar” gibi sözler etmeye başladı.
• 23 Nisan: DEM Parti İmralı heyeti üyesi Pervin Buldan Meclis resepsiyonunda gazetecilere açıklanmayan başka temasların da olabileceğini ima etti. Buldan’a TBMM’nin süreç yasaları için bir an önce harekete geçmesi gerektiğini ve sürecin “senkronik”, eşzamanlı yürütülmesi    gerektiğini söyledi. Aynı resepsiyonda MHP lideri Devlet Bahçeli de Meclis’in harekete geçmesi için Meclis Başkanı Numan Kurtulmuş’u işaret etti.
• 30 Nisan: Erdoğan ve Bahçeli, Beştepe’de yüz yüze görüştü.

“Senkronik” Gelişmeler

• 3 Mayıs: MİT Başkanı Kalın’ın AK Parti yönetimine, PKK’nın silah bırakma yöntemleri dahil sürecin gidişatı konusunda bilgi verdiği haberleri çıktı.
• 5 Mayıs: PKK yönetimi, PKK kurumsal kimliği değil “Apocu Hareket” imzası kullanıp bir yıl önceki Fesih Kongresi’ne gönderme yaparak Öcalan’a “statü” verilmesi gerektiğini söyledi. Aynı gün Bahçeli MHP grubunda Öcalan’a “Barış ve Siyasallaşma Koordinatörü” statüsü önerdi. DEM bunu onayladı.
• 9 Mayıs: Erdoğan Irak Kürdistan Bölgesel Yönetimi Başbakanı Mesrur Barzani ile İstanbul’da görüştü. Aynı gün Darka Mazi sitesinde PKK yöneticilerinin Öcalan’la görüştürüldüğü haberi çıktı. (Bu da iddialar doğru değilse bazı KDP kaynaklarının Öcalan’la dolaylı görüşmeleri doğrudan görüşme olarak yanlış anlayıp sızdırmış olması ihtimalini akla getiriyor.)
• 12 Mayıs: Darka Mazi SDG yöneticilerinin de Öcalan’la görüştürüldüğünü yayınladı.
• 16 Mayıs: Erdoğan, Kazakistan dönüşünde Cumhur İttifakı olarak Terörsüz Türkiye’nin başarısını istemeyenleri sevindirmeyeceklerini söyledi.

Evet mi, hayır mı, sessizlik mi?

Uçağa çağrılı gazetecilerin PKK ve SDG temsilcilerinin Öcalan’la görüştürülmesini sormadığını İletişim Başkanlığının yayınladığı yanıtlardan anlayabiliyoruz.
Henüz doğruluğu kabul edilmese de, bu tür gizli görüşmeler Kürt sorununun TBMM çatısı altında, siyasi ve demokratik yöntemlerle, PKK’nın “silahsızlaşması” yoluyla çözülecekse, iç barışa hizmet edecekse, elbette yapılabilir.
Türkiye’nin ve bütün vatandaşların bugün ve geleceğini belirleyecek bu kadar önemli bir sürece ait bu iddiaların doğru mu, yanlış mı, gerçek mi, dezenformasyon mu olduğunu bilmekse, bir kez ortaya atıldıktan sonra, hakkımız değil mi? Süreç açısından da daha iyi olmaz mı?
Önce PKK, sonra SGD yöneticileri İmralı’da Öcalan’la görüştürüldüler mi?
Evet mi, hayır mı? Yoksa sessizliğe devam mı?

CNN - World - Iran eyes a new source of power deep beneath the strait of Hormuz - 9 hr ago - by Mustafa Salem, Sarah Tamimi

CNN - World

Iran eyes a new  source of power deep     beneath the strait of Hormuz

9 hr ago 

by Mustafa Salem, Sarah Tamimi 



Emboldened by its successful wartime blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, Iran is turning to one of the hidden arteries in the global economy: subsea cables beneath the waterway that carry vast internet and financial traffic between Europe, Asia and the Persian Gulf.


The Islamic Republic wants to charge the world’s largest tech companies for using the subsea internet cables laid under the Strait of Hormuz, and state-linked media outlets have vaguely threatened that traffic could be disrupted if firms don’t pay. Lawmakers in Tehran discussed a plan last week which could target submarine cables linking Arab countries to Europe and Asia.

“We will impose fees on internet cables,” Iranian military spokesperson Ebrahim Zolfaghari declared on X last week. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards-linked media said Tehran’s plan to extract revenue from the strait would require companies like Google, Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon to comply with Iranian law while submarine cable companies would be required to pay licensing fees for cable passage, with repair and maintenance rights given exclusively to Iranian firms.

Some of these companies have invested in the cables running through the Strait of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf, but it’s unclear if those cables traverse Iranian waters.

It’s also unclear how the regime could force tech giants to comply, as they are barred from making payments to Iran due to strict US sanctions; as a result, the companies themselves may view Iran’s statements as posturing rather than serious policy.

Still, state-affiliated media outlets have issued veiled threats warning of damage to cables that could impact some of the trillions of dollars in global data transmission and affect worldwide internet connectivity.

<em>Screenshots taken from </em><a href="http://www.submarinecablemap.com" target="_blank"><em>www.submarinecablemap.com</em></a><em> in May 14, 2026.</em>

CNN has reached out to the companies mentioned in the Iranian report.

As fears grow that the war could resume following US President Donald Trump’s return from China, Iran is increasingly signaling that it has powerful tools at its disposal beyond military force. The move underscores the significance of the Strait of Hormuz beyond energy exports, as Tehran seeks to turn its geographic leverage into long-term economic and strategic power.

Subsea cables form the backbone of global connectivity, carrying the vast majority of the world’s internet and data traffic. Targeting them would affect far more than internet speeds, threatening everything from banking systems, military communications and AI cloud infrastructure to remote work, online gaming and streaming services.

Iran’s threats are part of a strategy to demonstrate its leverage over the Strait of Hormuz and ensure the survival of the regime, a core objective for the Islamic Republic in this war, said Dina Esfandiary, Middle East lead at Bloomberg Economics.

“It aims to impose such a hefty cost on the global economy that no-one will dare attack Iran again,” she said.

‘Cascading digital catastrophe’

Several major intercontinental subsea cables pass through the Strait of Hormuz. Because of long-standing security risks with Iran, international operators have deliberately avoided Iranian waters, instead clustering the majority of the cables in a narrow band along the Omani side of the waterway, said Mostafa Ahmed, a senior researcher at the United Arab Emirates-based Habtoor Research Center, who published a paper on the effects of a large-scale attack on submarine communications infrastructure in the Gulf.

<em>Screenshots taken from </em><a href="http://www.submarinecablemap.com" target="_blank"><em>www.submarinecablemap.com</em></a><em> in May 14, 2026 showing cables traversing the Strait of Hormuz.</em>

However, two of those cables, Falcon and Gulf Bridge International (GBI), run through Iranian territorial waters, said Alan Mauldin, research director at TeleGeography, a telecom research firm.

Iran has not explicitly said it will sabotage the cables, but it has repeatedly declared through officials, lawmakers and state-linked media of its intent to punish Washington’s allies in the region. It appears to be the latest asymmetric warfare technique devised by the regime to attack its neighbors.

Armed with combat divers, small submarines, and underwater drones, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) poses a risk to underwater cables, Ahmed said, adding that any attack could trigger a cascading “digital catastrophe” across several continents.

Iran’s neighbors across the Persian Gulf could face severe disruptions to internet connection, potentially impacting critical oil and gas exports as well as banking. Beyond the region, India could see a large proportion of its internet traffic affected, threatening its huge outsourcing industry with losses amounting to billions, according to Ahmed.

The strait is a key digital corridor between Asian data hubs such as Singapore and some cable landing stations in Europe, Ahmed said. Any disruption could also slow financial trading and cross-border transactions between Europe and Asia, while parts of East Africa could face internet blackouts.

And if Iran’s proxies decide to employ similar tactics in the Red Sea, the damage could be far worse.

In 2024, three submarine cables were severed when a vessel struck by Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthi militants dragged its anchor across the seabed while sinking, disrupting nearly 25% of internet traffic in the region, according to Hong Kong-based HGC Global Communications.

Even though the impact of damage to the cables could be high in the Middle East and some Asian countries, TeleGeography said “cables traversing the Strait of Hormuz account for less than 1% of global international bandwidth as of 2025.”

Cable warfare isn’t new

The first transatlantic telegram was sent through an undersea cable in 1858, carrying a 98-word congratulatory message from Britain’s Queen Victoria to US President James Buchanan that took more than 16 hours to arrive. The importance of undersea cables has grown exponentially since.

Today, a single optical fiber in modern submarine cables can carry data equivalent to roughly 150 million simultaneous phone calls at the speed of light, according to the International Cable Protection Committee.

The practice of disrupting underwater communication cables dates back nearly two centuries to the laying of the first telegraph cable in the English Channel in 1850. Among the opening acts of World War I, Britain severed Germany’s key telegraph cables, cutting off its communications with its forces.

Most modern cable damage results in minimal disruption because operators can quickly reroute traffic across the global network of subsea networks. Yet, any large-scale damage today would have far greater consequences than in the telegraph age, given the world’s near absolute dependence on data flows through these cables.

The ongoing war in Iran could also seriously complicate cable repair attempts as maintenance vessels must remain stationary for extended periods while fixing faults, experts say. Adding to the challenge, of the five maintenance ships that normally operate in the region, only one remains inside the Persian Gulf, according to Mauldin.

Emulating the Suez Canal

Iranian news outlets have framed the proposal to charge for subsea cables passing through its waters as compliant with international law, citing the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which includes provisions governing submarine cables.

While Iran has signed but not ratified the convention, it is considered by the legal community as binding under customary international law. Article 79 of UNCLOS says coastal states have the right to establish conditions for cables or pipelines entering their territory or territorial sea.

Iranian media outlets have pointed to Egypt as a precedent. Cairo has leveraged the Suez Canal’s strategic location to host many subsea cables linking Europe and Asia, generating hundreds of millions of dollars annually in transit and licensing fees.

The Suez Canal, however, is an artificial waterway excavated through Egyptian territory, while the Strait of Hormuz is a naturally occurring strait governed by a different legal framework, according to an international law expert.

“Of course, for existing cables, Iran has to abide by the contract that had been made when the cable was laid,” Irini Papanicolopulu, a professor of international law at SOAS University of London, told CNN. “But for new ones, any state, including Iran, can decide if and under what conditions, cables can be laid in its territorial sea.”

Esfandiary, of Bloomberg Economics, said Iran “theoretically knew” it had leverage over the strait but was uncertain how significant the impact would be if it acted on those threats.

Now, she added, Tehran “has discovered the impact.”