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France and the UK have had enough of watching from the sidelines. Today they convened an emergency multinational meeting on the Strait of Hormuz — because Iran already answered the question the world had been asking for decades. Can Iran close the Strait of Hormuz? Yes. It did. And Europe was never more unprepared for
France and the UK have had enough of watching from the sidelines. Today they convened an emergency multinational meeting on the Strait of Hormuz — because Iran already answered the question the world had been asking for decades. Can Iran close the Strait of Hormuz? Yes. It did. And Europe was never more unprepared for the answer.
LONDON / PARIS / BRUSSELS — The meeting was inevitable. What took so long was the admission that Europe needed to call it.
France and UK are convening an emergency multinational meeting in London today — bringing together foreign ministers, energy security officials, and naval commanders from more than a dozen allied nations — to address the singular strategic reality that the 2026 Strait of Hormuz crisis has imposed on the global order: the world’s most critical energy chokepoint has been forcibly closed for the first time in modern history, a ceasefire has been extended without resolution, and the bilateral US-Iran framework that produced it has excluded every European stakeholder from the architecture that will determine global energy security for the next decade.
The strait of hormuz meeting is the most significant European-led security convening since the early days of the Ukraine conflict. It is also, diplomatically, an act of institutional self-assertion — france and uk reclaiming a seat at a table that Washington constructed without consulting them.
Why France and UK Are Acting Now
The timing is not coincidental. It is constructed.
The france and uk decision to convene today — rather than waiting for the Islamabad talks to conclude or the Trump ceasefire extension to expire on May 1 — reflects a specific calculation that European governments have been making privately since February 28: the bilateral US-Iran negotiating framework is structurally insufficient to produce a strait of hormuz security arrangement that protects European interests.
Europe’s Hormuz exposure is acute and asymmetric. The United States — as Trump repeatedly noted during the crisis — imports approximately 7% of its crude through the strait of hormuz. The UK sources approximately 30% of its oil and gas from Gulf producers. France imports roughly 40% of its crude from the region. Germany, Italy, Spain, and the Netherlands — all represented at today’s meeting — are collectively exposed to a strait of hormuz disruption at levels that make the American experience look insulated by comparison.
When Brent crude surged from $72.87 to a physical peak of $144.42 during the Hormuz closure, European refineries were paying those prices on far larger volumes than their American counterparts. European consumer energy prices, already elevated from the Russia-Ukraine disruption, absorbed a shock that the Biden and Trump administrations had never modeled as a serious scenario in their contingency planning frameworks — because American domestic shale production provided a buffer European markets do not have.
French President Macron reportedly told the Élysée press pool Tuesday: “Europe cannot be the largest economic victim of a conflict it had no role in starting and no seat in negotiating. The strait of hormuz is not an American asset. It is a global commons. We intend to treat it as such.”
UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy confirmed the London meeting with a statement that positioned it explicitly as a complement to — not a challenge of — the US-led Islamabad process: “The france and uk initiative today is about ensuring that the eventual strait of hormuz framework reflects the full range of international stakeholders whose economic security depends on free passage. We support President Trump’s diplomacy. We are adding European weight to it.”
Can Iran Close the Strait of Hormuz? The Question 2026 Answered
The central question that has haunted global energy security planning for four decades — can Iran close the strait of Hormuz — was definitively answered on February 28, 2026.
Yes. Iran can close the strait of Hormuz. It did.

The 2026 closure was the first enforced closure in the strait’s modern history. Prior Iranian threats — in 1980 during the Iran-Iraq war, in 2012 during the sanctions standoff, in 2019 after the Stena Impero seizure — were deterred by the implicit threat of a US military response. On February 28, Iran made the calculation that the cost of closure was lower than the cost of continued conventional military defeat, and it closed the strait despite the presence of two US carrier strike groups in the region.
That calculation — that Iran can close the strait of Hormuz even against American military opposition — is the foundational reality that today’s London meeting must address. The old deterrence architecture, built around the assumption that US naval superiority made Hormuz closure prohibitively costly for Iran, has been empirically tested and found insufficient.
The Dallas Federal Reserve called the closure “the greatest global energy security challenge in history.” The strait of hormuz carries 20 million barrels per day — roughly 20% of global petroleum consumption, 34% of seaborne crude trade, and 20% of global LNG. It serves 84% of Asian crude export markets. And as of February 28, 2026, it has been established beyond any remaining theoretical doubt that it can be closed — by a nation state with asymmetric naval capabilities and sufficient political will.
Today’s france and uk meeting exists because that answer requires a new international framework to respond to it.
What the London Meeting Will Address
The agenda, circulated to participating delegations Tuesday evening and reported by Reuters and the Financial Times, covers four core issues.
Freedom of navigation framework: A proposed multinational naval escort mechanism for commercial vessels transiting the strait of hormuz — modeled partly on the Operation Sentinel and Operation Atalanta frameworks used in the Gulf of Aden — that distributes the burden of Hormuz security across NATO and partner navies rather than concentrating it in American assets. The UK’s Royal Navy and France’s Marine Nationale are expected to offer specific force contribution commitments.
Snapback sanctions architecture: The UK, France, and Germany — the E3 — triggered UN snapback sanctions on Iran in September 2025. Today’s meeting will address how those sanctions interact with any final US-Iran deal framework, and whether European signatories to the JCPOA retain independent authority to lift or maintain them regardless of bilateral US-Iran arrangements.

Energy diversification emergency measures: A coordinated European response to the ongoing supply disruption — pooling strategic petroleum reserves, coordinating LNG import infrastructure access, and establishing a joint price stabilization mechanism that reduces individual nation exposure to strait of hormuz volatility.
Diplomatic parallel track: Whether Europe should pursue a formal parallel diplomatic channel to the Islamabad process — potentially through the UN Security Council — that gives European stakeholders a voice in any final nuclear and security framework rather than inheriting terms negotiated without them.
The US Response
Washington’s reaction to the France and uk London initiative has been carefully calibrated to neither endorse nor rebuff it.
Secretary of State Rubio — who has consistently expressed skepticism about the Islamabad process — issued a statement calling the London meeting “a welcome demonstration of allied solidarity on global energy security” while noting that “the United States remains the lead negotiating party in the bilateral framework with Iran and any multilateral initiatives should complement rather than complicate that process.”
The diplomatic translation: Washington does not want European involvement in the US-Iran bilateral negotiation. It is willing to tolerate European activity on the strait of Hormuz security architecture surrounding it.
VP Vance’s Islamabad delegation did not comment.
What Experts Are Saying
Richard Nephew, former State Department sanctions coordinator and one of the architects of the JCPOA framework, told the Financial Times: “The france and uk initiative is overdue. The strait of hormuz cannot be secured by American deterrence alone — February 28 proved that. A multilateral framework with European naval contributions and diplomatic weight is more durable than any bilateral arrangement Washington produces in Islamabad.”
Dr. Camille Grand of the European Council on Foreign Relations framed the strategic significance: “Europe has been a passenger in this crisis from day one — paying the economic price, absorbing the energy shock, watching from outside the negotiating room. Today’s meeting is Europe’s declaration that it intends to be a driver in whatever comes next.”
Energy analyst Anas Alhajji noted the immediate market relevance: “The moment the London meeting produces a credible multinational naval escort framework for the strait of hormuz, you will see physical Brent drop $8–12 per barrel. The market is pricing geopolitical uncertainty. Multilateral security architecture reduces that uncertainty.”
The Stakes
Brent crude is trading at $109 per barrel. Gas across Europe averages the equivalent of $6.20 per gallon. The iran ceasefire extension expires May 1. The Islamabad talks resume April 25.
France and uk are convening today because the answer to the question “can iran close strait of hormuz” is no longer theoretical. It is historical. And the world that exists after February 28, 2026 requires a multilateral response architecture that the world that existed before it never built.
The London meeting begins at 10:00 a.m. GMT. The strait of hormuz carries 20 million barrels through it today. Both facts are, simultaneously, the reason the meeting is happening.


