Trump’s Kharg threat, reversal show Iran war high-wire act
President Donald Trump considered capturing Kharg Island, Iran's main oil export terminal. This move would have severely impacted Iran's economy. However, Trump later withdrew the threat as negotiations advanced. The island remains a significant p...

It’s a tantalizing target for Trump. The island handles the vast majority of the country’s oil exports and represents perhaps the most direct way to squeeze the Tehran regime economically and deprive it of a critical source of revenue.
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Trump said in a social media post Thursday that the US “will be taking Kharg Island” and assume control of Iran’s oil and gas markets. In a subsequent interview with Fox News, he said his preference has always been to take the prized site.
In the same interview, he acknowledged the significant political risks of such a move.
“I don’t know that America has the stomach for it, to be honest with you,” Trump said. And hours later, he abandoned that goal, at least for now, saying talks on a deal were close and the US was calling off strikes. Asked in the Oval Office if a Kharg Island operation was off the table, he said, “if we sign this agreement, it would be.”
The Kharg threat also underscores the extent to which Trump’s rhetoric can outrun reality, with Tehran more willing to keep up the fight and wait out a president looking for an exit.
Seizing Kharg would mark a significant escalation in the war, posing risks for American troops and further entrenching the US in the conflict while triggering further tumult in oil markets.
The small island off the Iranian mainland has been a critical oil export terminal for decades, and any disruption to operations there or unexpected swings in export volumes can quickly affect energy prices.
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A seizure of Kharg would likely fall to the Marines, who could both capture the island and establish a defensive position afterward. Other units, such as the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division, could rapidly deploy but would face greater challenges holding territory over an extended period.
For now, Kharg remains more useful as negotiating leverage than as a military objective. Yet the fact that Trump continues raising it publicly highlights how few attractive options remain as a war he once suggested could be resolved quickly shows no signs of ending.
Iran has repeatedly warned that any attempt to seize sovereign territory would trigger a major retaliation, raising the prospect of a broader regional conflict and potentially drawing the US deeper into the war with additional American casualties.
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