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Trump demands help with Strait of Hormuz, threatens more strikes on Kharg Island

Hadriana Lowenkron, Bloomberg News on

Published in News & Features

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump reiterated his appeals for help from other nations to secure the Strait of Hormuz, saying that Iran was nearly obliterated even as the war keeps roiling oil markets and global shipping.

“Numerous countries have told me they’re on the way — some are very enthusiastic about it, and some aren’t. Some are countries that we’ve helped for many, many years,” Trump told reporters Monday during a White House event.

The president expressed his frustration with other nations that have so far been publicly noncommittal on his calls to help ensure vessels can transit the strait. Later on Monday he said he had requested China — among those he’s asked for support — to delay a summit with his counterpart Xi Jinping for about a month, saying it was important for him to remain in Washington to oversee the war.

Trump has called out NATO and others, claiming they had leaned on the United States for “tens of billions of dollars” in protection, yet failed to act when asked.

Trump’s remarks dovetail with a series of attacks in recent days that indicate neither side is letting up in a conflict that has upended the region. Asked Monday if the U.S. could end the war this week, Trump responded, “Sure,” but added: “I don’t think so, but it’ll be soon.”

U.S. crude traded down about 5% to end the session at $93.50 a barrel after signs that supplies from emergency reserves will be available in coming weeks. Brent crude was down nearly 3% on the day but still settled above $100 a barrel. That marks the third straight session prices have closed above the key psychological level, the longest such streak since August 2022.

The effective closing of the Strait of Hormuz — a transit point for about a fifth of the world’s oil — has forced the likes of the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait to reduce oil output further. Still, a trickle of vessels is beginning to find a way through the waterway.

“We’re hammering their capacity to threaten commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz with more than 30 mine-laying ships destroyed,” Trump said Monday. He added U.S. officials weren’t certain whether Iran has actually laid mines in the strait but warned that it would be “a form of suicide” if they did.

Trump said more than 7,000 targets have been struck and that Iran’s “anti-aircraft is decimated, their radar is gone and their leaders are gone. Other than that, they’re doing quite well.”

The president also threatened to expand strikes on Kharg Island to target oil infrastructure, saying Monday, “We can do that on five minutes’ notice. It’ll be over.” The Persian Gulf island is Iran’s main export hub and was hit by the U.S. late last week.

As the war entered its 18th day, the United Arab Emirates announced that it had temporarily closed off its airspace as a precaution, the Emirati news agency WAM reported, citing the General Civil Aviation Authority. Dubai also briefly halted flights at its main airport.

Iran struck new targets across the Persian Gulf, hitting a key UAE oil hub. The UAE oil-export terminal of Fujairah suspended loadings temporarily after a drone strike on Monday — the second attack in as many days. Israel carried out more airstrikes on infrastructure in the Islamic Republic’s capital, Tehran.

On Monday evening, the Israel Defense Forces said on X that a “precise strike” last week had dismantled an Iranian naval headquarters.

Saudi Arabia has begun pumping oil through a pipeline that runs from its eastern oil fields to a port at Yanbu on its western coast. That’ll allow it to avoid the strait for at least some of its crude exports. There have been 16 reported attacks on vessels in and around Hormuz since the war began, according to the U.K. Maritime Trade Operations.

Surging oil prices since the start of the war — up about 40% in the past two weeks — have in turn pressured U.S. gasoline prices, with midterm elections that will decide control of both houses of Congress just months away. The average cost of a gallon of gas has risen each day since the conflict began, according to American Automobile Association data.

Underscoring the domestic stakes for Trump, administration officials Sunday asked Americans for patience.

He has called on world powers — including France, the U.K., Japan and China — to help the U.S. reopen the strait by sending warships to provide escorts to commercial vessels.

 

Trump added that Secretary of State Marco Rubio would announce countries that would help the U.S. with that effort, saying some of the nations involved would be “fairly local.”

“If there was an easy way to fix Hormuz, it would have been fixed in the Reagan administration,” Caroline Glick, adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said in an interview, adding that Israel was doing what it could to help secure the waterway while acknowledging limitations in combating Iran’s “terror on the seas.”

The response from other allies across Europe and Asia has ranged from caution to ambivalence if not outright rejection. European officials have begun debating whether to redirect a Red Sea naval mission toward Hormuz, but the move requires unanimous approval and faces opposition in some capitals, including Berlin. In Asia, key U.S. partners including Japan and South Korea have also stopped short of committing ships.

Trump on Monday said he was “very proud of what we did,” arguing that without U.S. action Iran would have had nuclear weapons — something the regime in Tehran denies seeking — and that other nations should be “thanking me.”

In Japan, officials said there were no plans to dispatch ships to escort stalled tankers — an issue that has complicated relations with the U.S. before Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s White House visit on Thursday. The U.K. similarly wouldn’t commit to a full naval mission, even as Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he’d explore options with allies.

While China hasn’t made any direct response to Trump’s request for help in the strait, the state-run Global Times dismissed the idea as a U.S. attempt to spread the risk “of a war that Washington started and can’t finish.”

On Monday, Trump highlighted the uncertainty over any talks, including who in the Iranian government could help end the war.

“We don’t know who their leader is. We have people wanting to negotiate. We have no idea who they are,” he said, adding that it was unclear if the new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, was even alive.

“A lot of people are saying that he’s badly disfigured. They’re saying that he lost his leg, the one leg, and he’s, you know, been hurt very badly. Other people are saying he’s dead,” Trump said.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has denied seeking talks or a ceasefire.

The conflict has left almost 4,000 people dead across the region, according to tolls from governments and nongovernmental organizations.

The war has also highlighted divisions within Trump’s own base — with many of his supporters expressing dismay. Trump was joined at an event Monday afternoon by Vice President JD Vance, a potential 2028 contender, who has been a longtime critic of U.S. involvement in extended overseas conflicts.

Pressed on his views, Vance said he had long agreed “that Iran should not have a nuclear weapon” and praised Trump’s handling of the war.

“We have a smart president, whereas in the past, we’ve had dumb presidents,” Vance said during the Oval Office event. “I trust President Trump to get the job done.”

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(With assistance from Devika Krishna Kumar, Paul Richardson, Dan Williams, John Harney, Sherif Tarek and Romy Varghese.)


©2026 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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