
By Elijah J. Magnier –
The maritime blockade imposed on Iran was designed to achieve what years of sanctions could not: sever Tehran’s principal economic artery by physically restricting its oil exports. Yet weeks into the blockade, Iranian crude continues to reach China through a combination of shadow shipping, stockpiled cargoes already at sea, covert ship-to-ship transfers and, increasingly, overland rail corridors across Central Asia. The US Navy and allied forces have successfully turned back or deterred many tankers, but complete sealing has proven elusive. The result is a fragmented, adaptive sanctions-resistance network that continues to leak oil, revenue and strategic resilience. This resilience also explains why Tehran is unlikely to rush into a nuclear or peace-related deal with Washington before the Trump-Xi summit in Beijing: Iran still has leverage, China still has bargaining power, and the blockade has not produced the desperation Washington expected.
The blockade has unquestionably damaged Iran’s exports. The Iranian production was reduced by roughly 400,000 barrels per day because storage capacity was reaching saturation under pressure from the US naval cordon. Yet the same reports acknowledge that Iran entered the blockade with massive quantities of crude already positioned offshore or afloat. Analysts estimated that between 90 and 140 million barrels of Iranian oil were already outside the immediate reach of interdiction when the blockade began. This strategic pre-positioning explains why the blockade never became airtight.
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