Iran Blames Strait Attacks on Errant Hardliners Trying to Undermine Negotiations
"The attack stemmed from an errant sect of hardliners who are trying to undermine negotiations. That could be possible. But it's getting harder and harder to believe every time you hear this from the IRGC."
About this episode
Glenn Beck and intelligence analyst Jason discuss escalating tensions in the Strait of Hormuz following Donald Trump's unprecedented announcement that the United States will charge a 20 percent fee on all cargo passing through the strategic waterway. Trump declared the US the official guardian of the strait and stated America will no longer provide free security for global shipping. The announcement came after Iran's IRGC asserted control over the strait, prompting immediate pushback from the Trump administration. In an unusual response, Iranian officials subsequently blamed recent ship attacks on rogue hardliners trying to undermine negotiations, a claim Beck and Jason view with deep skepticism. The hosts analyze whether this signals genuine internal power struggles within Iran's regime or represents a North Korea-style delay tactic. Beck proposes tracking disappearances, executions, or arrests of Iranian officials as the key indicator of which faction holds true power. Jason reports that recent US strikes have targeted Iranian radar sites, missile installations, and small boats along the coast, specifically degrading Iran's ability to threaten shipping. He notes oil prices have risen only 3.5 percent despite the conflict, suggesting the southern corridor remains operational. Beck emphasizes the existential stakes, warning that if Iran gains nuclear weapons and control of the strait, it would trigger a nuclear arms race across the Middle East and potentially cause a 1930s-style global depression. He stresses that with US strategic oil reserves depleted, there is virtually no margin for error in securing this chokepoint through which global oil supplies flow.
Key takeaways
- Trump announced a 20 percent fee on all cargo through the Strait of Hormuz, ending decades of free US security for global shipping lanes.
- Iran blamed recent ship attacks on rogue hardliners undermining negotiations, an unusual public admission Beck and Jason view skeptically.
- Beck proposed tracking disappearances or arrests of Iranian officials as the key indicator of which regime faction truly holds power.
- Recent US strikes targeted Iranian radar sites, missile installations, and small boats specifically to degrade their ability to threaten shipping.
- Oil prices rose only 3.5 percent despite heightened conflict, suggesting the southern shipping corridor through the strait remains operational.
- Iran fired on Jordan, Oman, Bahrain, and Kuwait after US strikes, continuing to punish regional neighbors.
- Beck warned that Iranian nuclear weapons combined with strait control would trigger Middle East nuclear proliferation and potentially global depression.