U.S. Power, Not International Law, Determines Whether the Strait of Hormuz Is Open
Source: National Review · Bias: Center Right
Summary
It has been historically open because the regime in Tehran understood that America would not tolerate Iranian restrictions.
Related Coverage
- Wannabe influencer busted for pelting sleeping homeless victims with ‘high-powered’ water gun (Right — New York Post)
- Rare copy of US Declaration of Independence found by volunteer in UK archives (Center — BBC News)
- The Race to Rescue 8,000 Sailors Still Stranded Behind Hormuz (Center — Bloomberg Politics)
- Iran's control of the Strait of Hormuz remains a powerful bargaining chip (Center — NPR Topics: News)
- A Vietnam Nurse Who Came Home, Helped Get Us to 250 (Center Right — RealClearPolitics - Homepage)
- Europe Has Replaced Most US Cuts Within NATO, Top Commander Says (Center — Bloomberg Politics)
- 'It's so hot' - Dangerous hot weather grips parts of the US (Center — BBC News)
- Memo to MAGA: Stop Being Idiots — The Dems Are TELLING US How to Destroy Them! (Right — PJ Media)
More Headlines From June 30, 2026
- Justice Thomas calls transgender language a ‘lie’ in concurring opinion (Center)
- Trump Reports Earning $26 Million From Foreign Real Estate Deals (Center)
- Michael Goodwin: Usual suspects wail about SCOTUS ruling upholding states’ rights to ban transgender athletes (Right)
- NPR’s Nina Totenberg Reveals Why She Posted a Story Claiming Alito Was Retiring – Then Quickly Retracted (Far Right)
- GOP gets new midterm spending weapon from SCOTUS (Center Left)







