In a dramatic war of words that has pushed the world to the edge of an unprecedented energy crisis, Iran has issued its strongest threat yet in response to President Trump’s vow to “obliterate” Iranian energy infrastructure.
Tehran has declared that any U.S. or Israeli strike on its remaining oil and gas facilities will result in the permanent closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) stated that Iranian forces are fully prepared to mine the entire waterway and sink any vessel attempting to pᴀss, effectively cutting off nearly 20% of global oil supply indefinitely.

A senior IRGC commander, speaking under the direct orders of Mojtaba Khamenei, delivered the chilling warning: “Trump threatens to destroy our energy sites? Then we will shut down the world’s energy lifeline forever. The Strait of Hormuz will become a closed zone. No oil will flow. We still have not used our best and ᴅᴇᴀᴅliest missiles.”
This ultimate warning comes as the conflict reaches a terrifying climax. Iranian missiles have repeatedly struck Tel Aviv, Haifa, and Gulf energy hubs, while U.S. Marines continue high-intensity operations on Iranian soil and American naval forces maintain a mᴀssive presence in the Gulf.
Retired U.S. General Jack Keane called Iran’s declaration “extremely dangerous and potentially suicidal,” warning that permanently closing the strait would trigger a global economic depression on a scale never seen before.

Global oil prices have reacted with absolute hysteria, surging past $34,200 per barrel — an unimaginable new record — as traders fear the complete and possibly irreversible shutdown of the world’s most critical energy artery.
Is Iran truly prepared to destroy the global economy to protect its regime, or is this the final desperate bluff of a nation under immense pressure? With Trump’s threat hanging in the air and Tehran vowing to shut Hormuz forever, the world stands on the precipice of an energy catastrophe that could reshape the 21st century.
The next 48 hours may decide the fate of the global economy.
