
Oil Ground Up Why There is No Off-Ramp for Trump’s Gulf War
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Mar 19, 2026 Matt Reed, Vice President at Foreign Reports and long‑time Gulf politics and energy analyst, explains why the Strait of Hormuz is effectively closed with no easy off‑ramp. He outlines Iran’s strategy to raise intervention costs, recent strikes on refineries and LNG, vulnerability of bypass pipelines like Yanbu, and the stark disconnect between paper markets and extreme cash prices in Asia.
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Competing Strategies Drive Escalation
- U.S. aims to degrade Iranian military capacity while Iran seeks regime survival by raising intervention costs.
- Reed explains Tehran's strategy is to prolong pain so U.S. and Israel will avoid future attacks, establishing lasting deterrence.
This Is A Crisis Of Lost Time
- The crisis is a 'crisis of lost time' where physical infrastructure damage and export losses compound daily.
- Johnston notes Qatari LNG damage and refinery hits can create years‑long production losses, not just temporary shut‑ins.
Bypass Pipelines Are No Longer Safe
- The East‑West pipeline at Yanbu, designed to bypass Hormuz, is now within Iranian strike range, removing a key practical offset.
- Recent attacks on Yanbu refinery and port show bypass routes are no longer safe.
