strait of hormuz blockade: Oil Prices Surge 40% as “Unplanned” Shipping Crisis Exposes Hidden Agenda Behind Iran Tensions
In a move that has sent shockwaves through global markets, commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz ground to a halt yesterday after a mysterious “technical failure” disabled key oil tankers—just hours before whispers of a new Western-led naval coalition surfaced. While mainstream headlines tout the event as a dangerous escalation with Iran, a closer look reveals a pattern of convenient crises that always seem to benefit the same players: defense contractors, oil speculators, and geopolitical strategists pushing for regime change. The sudden blockade, which has already spiked crude prices by 40%, raises glaring questions about who truly profits from instability in this chokepoint. Is this a genuine threat to global supply chains, or a manufactured theater designed to justify military expansion—and distract from domestic economic failures? Sources with ties to maritime intelligence suggest the “accident” was orchestrated to test the public’s appetite for a broader conflict, while independent analysts point to suspicious trading patterns on energy futures just hours before the chaos erupted.