Britain Urges Joint Pressure on Iran to Reopen Hijacked Strait of Hormuz

Britain's Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper convened a meeting of about 40 countries to address the crisis in the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran has effectively hijacked, threatening global energy security. She called for collective diplomatic and economic pressure to reopen the vital waterway and ensure the safety of trapped ships and crew. The United States was notably absent from the meeting, as President Trump simultaneously threatened Iran while urging other nations to solve the problem themselves. France's President Macron, however, dismissed military action as an unrealistic option to resolve the standoff.

Key Points: UK Calls for Diplomatic, Economic Pressure to Open Strait of Hormuz

  • UK calls for joint diplomatic & economic pressure
  • Iran throttling 20% of world oil & gas transit
  • US absent from crisis meeting, Trump threatens Iran
  • France's Macron rules out military action as unrealistic
  • Meeting seeks safe passage for trapped ships
3 min read

At meet on Hormuz crisis, Britain urges joint 'diplomatic, economic pressures' on Iran

Britain's Foreign Secretary urges 40 nations to use collective diplomatic and economic tools to reopen the vital Strait of Hormuz, hijacked by Iran.

"We have seen Iran hijack an international shipping route to hold the global economy hostage - Yvette Cooper"

New York, April 2

Britain's Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper called on Thursday for joint action to exert diplomatic and economic pressures to open the Strait of Hormuz, which has been "hijacked" by Iran.

Speaking at the meeting of about 40 countries, including India, convened from London on the Strait, she said, "We have seen Iran hijack an international shipping route to hold the global economy hostage".

She condemned Iran's reckless actions in the Strait that are "hitting global economic security".

"We are focusing on the diplomatic and international planning measures, including collective mobilisation of our full range of diplomatic and economic tools and pressures" to get it open, she said.

Action is needed "to guarantee the safety of trapped ships and seafarers, and effective coordination that we need across the world to enable a safe and sustained opening of the strait".

Cooper did not spell out what exact action could be taken, but she focused on a post-ceasefire environment.

"We are also convening military planners to look at how we marshal our collective defensive military capabilities, including looking at issues such as de-mining or reassurance once the conflict eases", she said.

US President Trump has asserted that Iran was negotiating, but Tehran has denied it was talking, although it admitted there were communications through third parties.

But Trump's threat on Thursday night to hit Iran hard over the next two or three weeks could only worsen the crisis in the immediate future.

After Cooper's opening speech, the meeting went into a closed session.

While most major economies like Japan, Germany and France, along with Gulf countries were represented at the meeting, the United States was not.

Nor was China, which has also been hit by the Strait crisis.

The meeting, held mostly through a video link, came the morning after Trump challenged the countries dependent on the Strait for their energy supplies to act by themselves and that the US was washing its hands of it.

"Go to the Strait and just take it, protect it, use it for yourselves. Iran has been essentially decimated. The hard part is done, so it should be easy", he said in his address to the nation.

France's President Emmanuel Macron, speaking during a visit to South Korea, ruled out military action to open the Strait as "unrealistic".

He said, "There are those who advocate for the liberation of the Strait of Hormuz by force through a military operation, a position sometimes expressed by the United States", but "it is never the option we have chosen and we consider it unrealistic".

Although Britain's meeting on the Strait had been convened before Trump's statement, it is an attempt to find a way out of the crisis brought on by the Israeli and US war on Iran now in its second month.

Although Trump has claimed that Iran's navy and the rest of the military have been destroyed, Iran still has been able to throttle traffic on the Strait, through which 20 per cent of the world's supply of gas and oil transits.

It has allowed a trickle of ships carrying energy supplies, including some from India, to pass, while the world - and the US - have been buffeted by a spike in energy prices.

Last week, Tehran said it would let through ships from "non-hostile" nations that don't "participate in nor support acts of aggression against Iran".

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
President Macron is right. A military option is completely unrealistic and would only escalate things further. The world saw what happened with the Suez blockage. Economic and diplomatic pressure is the only sane path forward. Hope India advocates strongly for peace.
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Rohit P
Trump's statement is so irresponsible! "Go and just take it"? This isn't a video game. His approach has created this mess, and now he wants others to clean it up. The US not being at the table says everything. Glad India is there to represent a balanced view.
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Sarah B
The article mentions India's ships are being allowed through as a 'trickle'. This shows the importance of maintaining independent foreign policy. We cannot afford to be seen as part of any hostile bloc. Our diplomacy should focus on being a bridge, not taking sides.
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Vikram M
20% of the world's oil and gas! No wonder petrol prices are shooting up. This crisis is hitting the common man's pocket directly. The international community needs to act fast, but with wisdom. More war is not the answer. 🙏
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Michael C
While I support diplomatic efforts, I have a respectful criticism. Britain convening this meeting feels a bit like old colonial powers trying to manage global chokepoints. The solution must involve regional powers and major consumers like India, Japan, and China more equitably. The absence of China is a big gap.

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