In a stunning sign of American weakness, President Donald Trump has reportedly made urgent appeals to China, Japan, and the United Kingdom to deploy their naval forces to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran has effectively turned into a war zone under Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei.
According to senior diplomatic sources, Trump personally reached out to the leaders of these nations in the past 48 hours, asking for a multinational naval task force to escort oil tankers and challenge Iran’s blockade. The desperate outreach comes after Iranian forces destroyed or trapped dozens of vessels, attacked multiple U.S.-linked tankers, and repeatedly threatened to completely shut down the critical chokepoint that carries 20% of the world’s oil supply.

The request is being seen globally as a humiliating admission that the United States can no longer secure one of the most vital waterways on Earth by itself.
This development arrives as Operation Epic Fury faces collapse on multiple fronts. The USS Gerald R. Ford remains crippled by recurring fires and limited operations, while the USS Abraham Lincoln has reportedly sustained serious damage from Iranian missile and drone attacks. The U.S. has already burned through more than $11 billion in munitions in the first week alone, with critical radar systems destroyed across the Gulf and interceptor stockpiles running dangerously low. Israel continues to endure punishing missile barrages from Iran and Hezbollah.
Despite Trump’s repeated claims of “total dominance,” Iran has shown extraordinary resilience and adaptability. By successfully controlling the Strait of Hormuz and forcing America to beg for international naval help, Mojtaba Khamenei’s regime has scored a major strategic and psychological victory.

China has so far remained silent on Trump’s request, while Japan and the UK are said to be extremely reluctant to send warships into what many now call “Iran’s kill zone.”
The optics are devastating for Washington. After promising a swift and decisive victory, the United States now appears unable to protect global energy routes without foreign ᴀssistance — even from strategic rivals like China.
Is America quietly losing the war in the Persian Gulf? As Trump reaches out for help from Beijing, Tokyo, and London, the world is witnessing a dramatic shift in power. The superpower that once ruled the seas may now be forced to share — or even beg for — control of the most important waterway on the planet.
The coming days will reveal whether this desperate diplomatic scramble can save America’s position… or mark the beginning of its decline in the region.
