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When the Cartel Loses Its Grip
The UAE’s exit from the OPEC signals not just a rupture in oil diplomacy, but a shift toward a more buyer-friendly energy order. For much of the modern economic age, oil has been less a commodity than a lever of power. Industrial growth, geopolitical alignments and even wars have turned on access to crude. For decades, that lever was held firmly in Western hands by the clutch of companies famously dubbed the ‘Seven Sisters’ that dominated the global oil trade from the 1920s t

Commodore S.L. Deshmukh
6 days ago4 min read


Closing the World’s Jugular
Trump’s Hormuz blockade seeks to weaponize a chokepoint that history shows is far easier to disrupt than to control. Across centuries, for rulers and states alike, to command a narrow strait has been to wield power far out of proportion to its geography. From the Hellespont of antiquity to the Danish Sound, chokepoints have tempted them with the promise of effortless leverage. The Strait of Hormuz is the latest test of that enduring illusion. If the latest stream of conflicti

Shoumojit Banerjee
Apr 1810 min read


A Ceasefire in Name Only
A fragile pause between Iran, Israel and America exposes the widening gap between diplomatic signalling and military reality. By definition, a ceasefire is a temporary suspension of hostilities. In practice, it is often something murkier: a tactical pause, a diplomatic fig leaf or worse, a convenient illusion. The ceasefire announced on April 7 between Iran, Israel and the United States appears to belong firmly in this latter category. Less a bridge to peace than a pause preg

Commodore S.L. Deshmukh
Apr 134 min read


Hormuz: Where Law Meets the Gunboat
In the world’s most vital oil chokepoint, the elegant certainties of maritime law dissolve into a murky contest of power, risk and coercion. The Strait of Hormuz is, in the dry language of international law, a “strait used for international navigation.” In the less sterile vocabulary of geopolitics, it is a loaded gun pointed at the global economy. Barely 21 nautical miles wide at its narrowest point, this corridor connects the oil-rich Persian Gulf to the wider Arabian Sea.
Capt. Naveen S. Singhal and Capt. M. M. Saggi
Apr 74 min read


An Open Letter to President Donald Trump
Mr. President, History has a quiet way of asking uncomfortable questions. It does not shout. It observes. And then, years later, it decides. What makes a leader endure in its memory? Is it the wars he wages, or the wars he prevents? Is it the force of command, or the wisdom of restraint? When the world stands at the edge of uncertainty, does true strength lie in action, or in the courage to pause? The Gulf today is a fragile crossroads of humanity’s future. The rising smoke f

C.S. Krishnamurthy
Apr 13 min read


Holding the Line at Hormuz
Amid the Iran crisis, India’s quiet convoy war in the much-contested Strait reveals a maturing maritime power. Few bottlenecks are more consequential today than the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow maritime hinge through which a quarter of the world’s seaborne oil and vast volumes of gas must pass. Weeks into the escalating Iran–Israel–United States conflict, traffic through Hormuz has slowed to a trickle, as insurers have recoiled and prices have lurched upward. For energy-impor

Commodore S.L. Deshmukh
Mar 304 min read


Gates of Power, Corridors of Pain: The Chokepoint Fallacy
From the Øresund to the Dardanelles, chokepoints have imposed prolonged conflict and heavy costs on those who seek to command them. Gallipoli landings, 1915. With Washington mired in a strategic cul-de-sac in Iran with no evident off-ramp, there has been frenzied speculation in the past few days of President Donald Trump and the Pentagon mulling weeks-long ground operations, including raids on Kharg Island and Iranian coastal positions abutting the Strait of Hormuz. Kharg, ly

Shoumojit Banerjee
Mar 305 min read


Gulf Tensions, Fertiliser Risks and India’s Natural Farming Hedge
India’s dependence on West Asian fertiliser routes has turned the Iran war into a domestic agricultural risk. When geopolitics intrudes upon agriculture, the consequences are measured in delayed sowing, rising costs and anxious farmers scanning uncertain skies. With no sign of the ongoing Iran war receding anytime soon, the prospect of a prolonged disruption in fertiliser supply, particularly through the narrow maritime chokepoint of the Strait of Hormuz, poses a tangible thr

Parashram Patil
Mar 295 min read


From 'Vishwaguru' to Middle Power
The ongoing tensions involving the United States, Israel and Iran are more than a routine geopolitical crisis; they offer a clear view of how power operates in the international system. For India, this moment provides a sobering perspective. While the country increasingly speaks of its role as a “Vishwaguru” (global guide), the reality is more measured-India continues to function as a middle power, adapting to global shifts rather than directing them. A key reason lies in Ind

Anil D. Salve
Mar 283 min read


The Hormuz Crisis and India’s Economic Reckoning
With the war in West Asia choking the Strait of Hormuz, India’s economic resilience is tested by energy, its deepest structural dependency. The dawn of 2026 brought optimism for India’s economy, with the EU trade deal finalized, a stable Union Budget, and U.S. tariffs cut from 50 percent to 18 percent, easing fiscal pressures and allowing the RBI to hold rates steady. This momentum was abruptly derailed as tensions between the U.S., Israel, and Iran escalated into direct mili

Amey Chitale
Mar 255 min read


Donald Trump’s Middle East Somersault
From dealmaker to belligerent, America’s President risks repeating the history he once sought to escape. In 1917, Woodrow Wilson, a scholar-president wary of foreign entanglements, found himself drawn into a war he had hoped to avoid. A century on, Donald Trump, who rose to power denouncing “endless wars” and promising to end them, appears to be caught in a similar contradiction. The arc of his Middle East policy, at once erratic and revealing, has bent from negotiation to co

Dr. V.L. Dharurkar
Mar 255 min read


‘Kharg Island Is Iran’s Oil Jugular’
There has been no let-up in the Israel-US war against Iran since the first strikes on February 28. While focus has always been on the Strait of Hormuz, all eyes have now turned to Trump’s most recent threat where he vowed to target Kharg island’s critical oil facilities if Iran continued to block Hormuz. In an interview with The Perfect Voice , Captain Naveen S. Singhal , former merchant navy captain and currently a shipping and marine consultant and member, Singapore Shippi

Ruddhi Phadke
Mar 245 min read
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