South Korea Joins Emergency Defence Meeting Over Strait of Hormuz Crisis

 South Korea is set to participate in a high-level multinational defence ministerial meeting today to discuss the escalating security situation surrounding the Strait of Hormuz, according to South Korean news agency Yonhap.

The fact that South Korea is at the table says everything.

This is no longer just a Middle East problem or an American problem. When a major East Asian economy with no direct border near the Persian Gulf is sending defence ministers to emergency security talks about a waterway in Iran’s backyard — the world is paying attention at the highest level.

South Korea’s stake in the Strait of Hormuz is enormous. The country imports nearly all of its oil and the vast majority of that supply passes through the strait. A prolonged blockade does not just raise fuel prices in Seoul — it threatens the energy security of an entire nation that runs on imported energy to power one of Asia’s most advanced industrial economies.

The multinational nature of this meeting is significant. When multiple defence ministers from different regions gather specifically to discuss one waterway, it signals that the situation has moved beyond diplomacy into the territory of coordinated military planning. Countries are no longer just watching and hoping for a deal. They are preparing for scenarios where no deal comes.

Iran meanwhile holds a position of extraordinary leverage. The ability to threaten — or control — the flow of nearly a fifth of the world’s oil supply gives Tehran a weapon that no missile or sanction can easily neutralise.

The meeting today will be closely watched by energy markets, military analysts and governments worldwide.

One strait. One crisis. The whole world in the room.

— KeStar Worldwide | Fast. Clear. Unfiltered.

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