I’m looking at the map about the strait of hormuz, I’ve looked up what made it so important and I still don’t get it. I thought that the reason there is so much conflict over it, was that I assumed it looked like it was a very integral passageway for ships to get in and out of. But looking at the map again, it only goes straight to into Kuwait.

What am I missing here? Couldn’t the ships just, not bother with that part and route through elsewhere?

  • SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Because the infrastructure in this region is a joke, while oligarchs suck trillions out of the ground to distribute to princes, no one wanted to invest in an alternative pipeline to the Red Sea. Seemed like a city for Douchebags was a better idea. Abu douchebag.

    • well redundancies are first of all expensive. plus there are already alternate ways of distribution. these are just insufficient for a naval blockade. the capacity of pumping it up and then putting it on a ship quasi-on-site is always gonna be magnitudes bigger and cheaper, than building pipelines. so …

      • SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca
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        19 hours ago

        well redundancies are first of all expensive.

        oh no, poor King Al Saud. They literally piss away trillions from oil revenues. While there is zero infrastructure to the west.