IRGC broadcasts warning to all ships in Strait of Hormuz threatening deadly force
"Attention all vessels in the Strait of Hormuz and Oman Sea. This is IRGC Navy. I repeat, this is IRGC Navy. For your own safety and safety of your crew, do not approach the strait. You will be fired upon. Turn around immediately or face consequences."
About this episode
In an emergency livestream analyzing rapidly escalating Middle East tensions, host Egleze speaks with energy analyst Philip Pilkington about the strategic vulnerabilities in global oil supply as Iran closes the Strait of Hormuz and Yemen enters direct conflict with Saudi Arabia. Pilkington makes the striking claim that Trump administration policies have been emboldened by what he characterizes as successful oil market price manipulation, with officials believing they can effectively "print oil" by keeping WTI prices suppressed even as crack spreads widen dramatically. The conversation reveals critical infrastructure details showing that Saudi Arabia and UAE oil rerouted around Hormuz through alternative pipelines must still transit the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait controlled by Houthi forces, creating a second chokepoint that could remove 60% of remaining Middle Eastern oil from global markets if closed. As the discussion unfolds, breaking news interrupts repeatedly: Iran strikes multiple vessels in Hormuz, the IRGC broadcasts threats of deadly force over maritime radio to all approaching ships, Yemen launches three waves of attacks on Saudi airports, and Saudi Arabia potentially closes its airspace. Pilkington argues that Western strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure reveal a depleted strategic playbook, with tactics borrowed from the Ukraine-Russia conflict despite unclear effectiveness. The analyst warns that Iran has deliberately preserved escalation options throughout the conflict while the US has exhausted most available cards. Technical difficulties force the stream to end prematurely, with plans to continue analysis as the situation develops and oil prices begin climbing from recent lows near $70 to $77 per barrel.
Key takeaways
- Energy analyst claims Trump administration convinced it can manipulate oil markets indefinitely, enabling aggressive tariff and foreign policy despite market warning signs
- Iran could remove 60% of remaining Middle Eastern oil from global markets by closing Bab-el-Mandeb Strait through Houthi proxies or direct IRGC operations
- IRGC broadcasts explicit threats over maritime radio to fire on any vessels approaching Strait of Hormuz after striking multiple ships
- Yemen launches three waves of attacks on Saudi airports after Saudi strikes, potentially leading to Saudi airspace closure
- Approximately 4 million barrels per day of Saudi oil rerouted around Hormuz still must pass through Houthi-controlled Bab-el-Mandeb chokepoint
- US strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure reveal depleted strategic options with tactics borrowed from Ukraine conflict of unclear effectiveness
- WTI crude rises to $77 from below $70 as diesel crack spreads exceed oil prices themselves, suggesting severe refining bottlenecks despite headline price suppression