9 points | by MilnerRoute 11 hours ago ago
2 comments
How does that change if we assume the strait stays closed? Because strategically speaking they’re incentivized to (and able to) keep it closed till us and Israel cease hostilities.
Which doesn’t give negotiators much room to work.
> How does that change if we assume the strait stays closed?
I think the default assumption is NACHO, not a chance Hormuz opens.
How does that change if we assume the strait stays closed? Because strategically speaking they’re incentivized to (and able to) keep it closed till us and Israel cease hostilities.
Which doesn’t give negotiators much room to work.
> How does that change if we assume the strait stays closed?
I think the default assumption is NACHO, not a chance Hormuz opens.