US Warns Iran of Economic Collapse and Total Defeat Over Strait of Hormuz

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned Iran it faced "economic collapse" and "total defeat" unless it abandons efforts to control the Strait of Hormuz and agrees to a diplomatic solution over its nuclear program. Rubio accused Iran of illegally mining international waters and targeting commercial ships, threatening one of the world's most critical shipping lanes. He said the US military operation "Project Freedom" was designed to restore freedom of navigation while broader sanctions continue to weaken Iran's economy. Rubio stated that diplomacy remained possible but warned the US would continue using military and economic leverage while talks proceed.

Key Points: Rubio Warns Iran of 'Total Defeat' Over Strait of Hormuz

  • Rubio warns Iran faces "economic collapse" and "total defeat"
  • US intensifies military, economic, and diplomatic pressure over Strait of Hormuz
  • Iran accused of mining international waters and threatening shipping lanes
  • Diplomacy possible but US will continue using military and economic leverage
3 min read

Rubio warns Iran of 'total defeat'

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio warns Iran of economic collapse and total defeat unless it abandons efforts to control the Strait of Hormuz and negotiates on its nuclear program.

"The alternative is growing isolation, economic collapse, and ultimately total defeat. - Marco Rubio"

Washington, May 6

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned Iran it faced "economic collapse" and "total defeat" unless it abandoned efforts to control the Strait of Hormuz and agreed to a diplomatic solution over its nuclear programme.

At a White House briefing, Rubio said the Trump administration was intensifying military, economic and diplomatic pressure on Tehran following weeks of escalating tensions in the Persian Gulf.

"The time has come for Iran to make a sensible choice," Rubio said. "The alternative is growing isolation, economic collapse, and ultimately total defeat."

Rubio accused Iran of illegally mining international waters, targeting commercial ships and threatening one of the world's most critical shipping lanes.

He said the US military operation known as "Project Freedom" was designed to restore freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz while broader sanctions continued to weaken Iran's economy.

"The blockade alone is costing Iran as much as $500 million a day in lost revenue," Rubio said. "Ninety per cent of total Iranian trade has been halted."

The secretary of state said Washington was prepared to continue increasing pressure unless Tehran returned to negotiations over its nuclear activities.

"The president, our president, has proven time and again that his preference is peace," Rubio said. "But Iran must accept the reality of this situation and come to the negotiation table."

Rubio repeatedly argued that Iran could not be allowed to acquire nuclear weapons, saying Tehran's actions in the Strait demonstrated the danger it would pose if armed with nuclear capability.

"A nuclear armed Iran could do whatever the hell they want with the Straits," Rubio said. "That's the world none of us want to leave behind."

He said Iran had long insisted it did not seek nuclear weapons while simultaneously pursuing activities consistent with military nuclear development.

"They innovate and try to innovate long-range delivery missiles," Rubio said. "They build these large underground centrifuges for enrichment activity."

Rubio also pointed to Iran's stockpile of highly enriched uranium.

"We know for a fact that they retain highly enriched uranium at 60 per cent, that they did so, and that has no civilian use," he said.

The secretary of state said diplomacy remained possible but warned that the US would continue using military and economic leverage while talks proceeded.

"If there's a real diplomatic path, we continue to explore it," Rubio said. "The diplomatic path could lead them to reconstruction, to prosperity and to stability."

At the same time, Rubio said recent US military operations had severely weakened Iran's military capabilities.

"They don't have a Navy left," Rubio said. "They don't have an Air Force."

He said Iran's missile-launching capacity and defence industrial base had suffered extensive damage.

"Their ability to build a shield behind which they could hide their nuclear programme was wiped out," Rubio said.

Rubio also described Iran's leadership as divided and increasingly isolated under mounting economic pressure.

"There has to be a pressure point on them that causes them to realise they cannot continue to close the Straits," he said.

The Trump administration has linked sanctions enforcement directly to the maritime crisis, warning foreign financial institutions and commercial actors against helping Tehran evade restrictions.

"Any foreign financial institution or commercial actor that enables Iran's sanctions evasion is going to face secondary sanctions exposure," Rubio said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
$500 million a day in lost revenue? That's a staggering number. But I'm not convinced that "total defeat" is a helpful threat - it just makes Iran more defensive. The US needs to realize that Iran's nuclear program is driven by its own security fears, not just aggression. Look at India - we managed a civil nuclear deal without all this saber-rattling. Would that work here? Probably not, but at least it's worth exploring.
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Arjun K
Rubio says "the president's preference is peace" but then talks about destroying Iran's navy and air force! 🙄 This feels like a replay of Iraq War propaganda - create a crisis, then act like the only option is war. The Strait of Hormuz is international waters - the US doesn't own the seas. India should use its good relations with Iran to push for mediation, not just watch from the sidelines. We have 8 million Indians working in the Gulf, their safety comes first.
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Michael C
Finally some strong leadership from Washington. Iran has been playing games with the international community for too long. 60% enriched uranium has no civilian purpose - that's fact. And their threats to shipping lanes affect the whole world. But I'm skeptical about "Project Freedom" - these US operations seldom end cleanly. India should stay neutral but prepare for oil price shocks. We still remember the 1973 oil crisis, don't we?
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Priya S
As an Indian watching this, I'm really worried. The US says "diplomacy remains possible" but then destroys their military capabilities - that's not how you negotiate. It's like offering someone tea while kicking their chair. 😅 Iran's behaviour in the Strait is wrong, but so is America's history of regime change in the Middle East. India should convene an emergency meeting at the UN - we have credibility with both sides. Remember, our Chabahar port project with Iran is vital for Afghanistan trade too.

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