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Jun 18, 2026

Suez Crisis vs Strait of Hormuz 2026: Lessons from 1956 for Today's Oil Chokepoint Crisis.

 

Welcome Tale Teller ClubPress and today's Politica UK InfoPod.


Suez Crisis vs Strait of Hormuz 2026: Lessons from 1956 for Today's Oil Chokepoint Crisis.


Can We Compare the Suez Crisis with the Hormuz Crisis?

Backgrounds, Parallels, and Enduring Lessons.


The Strait of Hormuz in 2026 and the Suez Canal in 1956 represent two defining moments when vital maritime chokepoints became flashpoints for great-power confrontation, economic disruption, and shifting global orders. Both crises involve a regional power asserting control over a critical waterway essential to global energy flows, triggering military responses from established powers and exposing the limits of imperial or hegemonic action. While the contexts differ—Suez marked the end of European colonialism, while Hormuz tests American primacy amid great-power competition—the parallels are striking and offer sobering lessons for policymakers today.


Background to the Suez Crisis (1956).

In July 1956, Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser nationalized the Suez Canal Company, a joint British-French enterprise that had controlled the waterway since its opening in 1869. The canal was a lifeline for Western Europe, carrying roughly three-quarters of its oil imports and significant trade volumes. Nasser's move followed the withdrawal of US and British funding for the Aswan High Dam, amid Cold War tensions and Egypt's push for Arab nationalism and independence from colonial influence.


Britain and France, viewing the nationalization as a direct threat to their economic interests and prestige, secretly colluded with Israel in the Protocol of Sèvres. On 29 October 1956, Israeli forces invaded the Sinai Peninsula. Britain and France then issued an ultimatum and intervened militarily under the pretext of separating the combatants, aiming to regain control of the canal.


The operation initially succeeded militarily but collapsed politically. The United States, under President Dwight D. Eisenhower, refused to support its allies and applied intense financial pressure, including threats to the British pound. The Soviet Union threatened intervention. Facing UN condemnation and economic strain, Britain and France withdrew by early 1957. Egypt retained control, the canal reopened under Egyptian management, and the crisis accelerated decolonization. It humiliated Britain and France, hastened the decline of their empires, boosted Nasser's stature, and confirmed the US and USSR as the new superpowers.


Background to the Strait of Hormuz Crisis (2026).

The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow natural chokepoint between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, handles about one-fifth to one-quarter of global seaborne oil trade and significant LNG volumes. It has long been a vulnerability, with Iran routinely threatening closure during tensions.


In early 2026, following US and Israeli military strikes on Iran (beginning around late February), which targeted regime elements including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Iran retaliated by declaring the strait "closed" from early March. Iranian forces used drones, missiles, fast-attack boats, and mines to disrupt shipping, attacking vessels and imposing de facto control or tolls. This led to a sharp drop in traffic, stranded tankers, killed crew members, and caused global oil price volatility and supply disruptions.


The US, under President Donald Trump, responded with naval enforcement, threats to Iranian infrastructure, and efforts to reopen the waterway, sometimes in coordination with allies but often unilaterally. Ceasefires and partial reopenings followed (e.g., April negotiations), but tensions persist into June 2026 with sporadic attacks, blockades, and brinkmanship. The crisis intertwines with broader Iran-Israel-US conflict, nuclear concerns, and great-power rivalry involving China.


Comparisons: Parallels and Differences.

Similarities:

Chokepoint Control as Leverage: Both involve a regional actor (Egypt/Iran) seizing or disrupting a vital passage to assert sovereignty and extract concessions, threatening global energy security.


Military Overreach by Major Powers: Britain/France (with Israel) in 1956 and the US (with Israel) in 2026 launched or supported operations expecting quick victories, only to face prolonged economic and diplomatic fallout.


Superpower Intervention and Alliance Strain: US opposition doomed the Suez operation; today, allies' reluctance and China's rising influence echo Eisenhower's restraint. Both highlight limits of unilateral action.


Economic Shockwaves: Suez closed the canal temporarily; Hormuz disruptions spike oil prices and disrupt supply chains, amplifying global inflation and energy insecurity.


Symbol of Decline: Suez signaled the end of British/French imperial reach. Analysts debate if Hormuz marks a "Suez moment" for US hegemony, exposing overstretch amid domestic fatigue and peer competitors.


Suez was a man-made canal under private/company ownership; Hormuz is an international strait governed by maritime law, though Iran claims influence over its waters.


Geopolitical era: Bipolar Cold War vs. multipolar world with China as an economic counterweight.

Scale of disruption: Hormuz's oil volumes dwarf Suez in immediate global impact, but modern alternatives (pipelines, diversified routes) and US energy independence mitigate some effects.


Outcomes so far: Suez ended in swift withdrawal and humiliation; Hormuz remains fluid with partial reopenings, negotiations, and ongoing enforcement.


Lessons from Suez for Hormuz and Beyond.

Beware Military Solutions to Political-Economic Problems: Force can secure short-term gains but often fails without broad international legitimacy. Britain and France achieved tactical successes but lost strategically. In Hormuz, sustained naval presence may keep lanes open but risks escalation, higher costs, and alienation of neutrals.


Economic Interdependence and Financial Weapons Matter:


Suez showed how currency pressure and oil dependence can humble powers. Today, oil shocks, sanctions, and alternative energy shifts (or lack thereof) will shape endurance. Diversification away from chokepoints remains crucial.

Alliances and Multilateralism Are Force Multipliers: Going it alone (or with limited partners) invites isolation. Eisenhower's stance preserved US moral authority. For the US in 2026, rebuilding trust with allies and leveraging forums like the UN General Assembly (as in 1956) could contain escalation.

Nationalism and Regional Actors Cannot Be Ignored: Nasser emerged stronger despite military setbacks. Iran, even weakened, uses asymmetric tools (drones, mines, proxies) effectively. Long-term stability requires addressing underlying grievances rather than regime-change fantasies.


Power Transitions Are Real: Suez accelerated the handover from European empires to US-Soviet bipolarity. Hormuz underscores the shift toward multipolarity, with China poised to benefit from US overcommitment in the Middle East. Avoiding "imperial overreach" means prioritizing core interests and sustainable commitments.


In conclusion, the comparison between Suez and Hormuz is not perfect but illuminating. History does not repeat exactly, yet it rhymes through chokepoints, hubris, and shifting power balances. For the UK and its allies listening to Politica UK, the lesson is clear: in an era of renewed great-power competition, true strength lies in strategic restraint, economic resilience, and diplomatic agility—not just naval firepower. Policymakers ignoring Suez's ghosts risk repeating its costly lessons in the waters of Hormuz.


©2026 Sarnia de la Maré FRSA.

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