Global Energy Crisis Looms as US Allies Reject Hormuz Coalition

The Trump administration's efforts to form a multinational naval coalition to reopen the blockaded Strait of Hormuz have faltered as key European and Pacific allies refuse to join the escalating war.

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The ongoing regional war has severely disrupted global shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, pushing oil prices past $102 a barrel. Arabic-language sources report that US President Donald Trump is aggressively seeking a multinational coalition to secure the waterway, demanding intervention from NATO and China. However, Hebrew and Farsi sources universally highlight the diplomatic failure of this initiative. Key allies, including Germany, France, Australia, Japan, and the UK, have explicitly refused to deploy warships. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer publicly rejected Trump's request for military support, stating the UK will not be dragged into a wider war with Iran, though he is consulting with the EU on a viable plan to restore navigation. In response to the allied rebuff, Trump dismissed the need for European assistance, asserting American supremacy and announcing unilateral military strikes aimed at "opening" the Strait. Farsi hardline media celebrated the coalition's failure as a humiliation for Washington, while opposition networks highlighted the devastating impact of the blockade on regional oil exports.

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Notes

There is rare cross-perspective consensus on the facts of the diplomatic friction. However, Hebrew media frames Trump's unilateral approach as a display of strength, while Arabic and Farsi state media frame the European refusal as a sign of American isolation and weakness.