# [WARNING] US Prepares Prolonged Iran Blockade As War Costs Hit $25 Billion

*Wednesday, April 29, 2026 at 3:04 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-29T15:04:56.212Z (29h ago)
**Tags**: Iran, UnitedStates, Oil, StraitOfHormuz, Sanctions, EnergyMarkets, MiddleEastConflict
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/5083.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Around 14:55–15:01 UTC, multiple reports indicated that President Trump has ordered preparation of a prolonged blockade targeting Iran’s economy and oil exports, following consultations with major oil companies. A senior Pentagon official simultaneously disclosed that the U.S. has already spent about $25 billion on the war with Iran, confirming expectations of an extended, resource-intensive campaign with direct implications for global oil flows and the Strait of Hormuz.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

Between 14:55 and 15:01 UTC on 29 April 2026, open-source reporting highlighted a coordinated set of Iran-related developments:
- At 14:59–15:01 UTC (Report 34), a senior Pentagon official stated that the United States has spent about $25 billion on the war with Iran so far, explicitly framing the situation as an ongoing conflict rather than a short punitive operation.
- At 14:59 UTC (Report 26), President Donald Trump was reported to have ordered advisers to prepare for a **prolonged blockade** of Iran aimed at sustained pressure on its economy, especially oil exports. The decision reportedly emerged from recent White House Crisis Room meetings and emphasizes economic pressure and obstruction of trade.
- At 14:06:53 UTC (Report 40), Reuters-based reporting indicated that Trump and oil companies discussed steps to continue the Iran blockade for months if necessary, implying private-sector coordination around supply management and contingency planning.
- In parallel, at 14:31–14:41 UTC (Reports 1–3), EIA data showed a large U.S. commercial crude draw (~6.2M bbl vs small build expected) and the **largest Strategic Petroleum Reserve withdrawal since October 2022**, indicating Washington is already leaning on strategic stockpiles in the context of the Hormuz disruption and Iran crisis.

These reports are consistent with earlier alerts about the Hormuz blockade, oil above $115, and the IRGC war junta consolidating power in Iran.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

On the U.S. side, the key actors are:
- President Donald Trump, who is directing strategy and has ordered preparation for a long-duration blockade.
- The National Security Council and Crisis Room staff, who are designing the blockade posture and rules of engagement.
- Pentagon leadership, managing operational costs and force posture; the $25B figure suggests sustained air/naval operations, ISR, and logistical support.
- U.S. energy policymakers and major oil companies, who appear to be in consultative roles regarding supply continuity and sanctions compliance.

On the Iranian side, previous reporting confirms:
- The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) war junta has assumed real power after Khamenei’s death, with Mojtaba Khamenei acting as a constrained consensus figure (Report 71).
- IRGC naval and missile forces are central to the ongoing Hormuz blockade and regional escalation.

3. Immediate military and security implications

The explicit planning for a prolonged economic and maritime blockade signals that Washington is shifting from a short, kinetic campaign framework to a **long-term coercive strategy** against Iran:
- Naval presence near the Strait of Hormuz and in the Arabian Sea is likely to remain elevated for months, increasing risks of miscalculation with IRGC units and potential third-party shipping.
- Iran, under an empowered IRGC leadership, is incentivized to sustain asymmetric pressure: harassment of shipping, proxy attacks, cyber operations, and drone/missile launches on regional energy infrastructure.
- Regional actors (Gulf states, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon) will calibrate their positions around a medium- to long-term U.S.–Iran confrontation, affecting basing, overflight rights, and covert logistics.

If the blockade is formally tightened—especially on crude, condensate, and petrochemical exports—Tehran could escalate with more aggressive interference in Hormuz traffic, expanding the risk envelope for all flagged vessels and insurers.

4. Market and economic impact

The combination of (a) a stated intention to maintain a blockade for months, (b) confirmation of substantial U.S. war costs, and (c) heavy U.S. stock draws, significantly increases the probability that the current **oil shock will persist**:
- **Oil:** Expect sustained upward pressure on Brent and WTI, keeping prices high or driving new spikes on any additional disruption or tanker incident. Forward curves are likely to steepen, with higher risk premia in near-dated contracts. Energy equities (especially U.S. and non-Iranian Gulf producers) stand to benefit, while refiners face margin volatility depending on product-crude spreads.
- **Shipping & insurance:** Higher war-risk premiums for tankers transiting Hormuz; some flows may reroute or delay. Japanese report of the Idemitsu Maru transit at 14:39 UTC (Report 30) is a small positive signal, but does not negate elevated risk.
- **Currencies:** Oil-importing currencies (yen, rupee, Turkish lira, euro) will be pressured by higher import bills, while petrocurrencies (CAD, NOK, some Gulf FX where flexible) may find support. Dollar strength is likely on safe-haven demand and higher U.S. rate expectations if inflation stays elevated.
- **Gold and risk assets:** Heightened geopolitical tail risk supports gold and other safe havens. Global equities face sector rotation: headwinds for airlines, logistics, and energy-intensive manufacturing; tailwinds for defense and energy.
- **U.S. domestic dynamics:** Accelerating SPR drawdowns reduces Washington’s buffer for future shocks, a risk that markets will increasingly price if the conflict drags on.

5. Likely next 24–48 hours

- Policy signaling: Expect additional U.S. statements clarifying the scope of the ‘prolonged blockade,’ potential new sanctions measures, and coordination with EU and Asian allies. Markets will watch for any explicit language on secondary sanctions or interdiction rules for third-country tankers.
- Iranian response: IRGC political and military messaging will likely harden, possibly accompanied by limited demonstrative actions in Hormuz or via proxies (Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Lebanon) to test U.S. and allied red lines.
- Market moves: Oil and shipping markets will continue to react intraday; any new incident in Hormuz (attack, seizure, or even near-miss) could trigger another >5% oil price move given already tight balances and SPR reliance.
- Allies and OPEC+: Gulf producers and remaining OPEC+ partners will reassess production guidance and routing options. Some may quietly increase output or reallocate flows to capitalize on higher prices while avoiding overt confrontation with Washington.

Overall, today’s disclosures mark a clear transition to a **long-haul confrontation** with Iran, embedding an extended geopolitical risk premium into energy and broader asset prices.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Reinforces a higher-for-longer crude regime with elevated geopolitical risk premia. Expect renewed upside pressure on Brent/WTI, steepening in oil forward curves, support for gold, and further strain on energy-importing currencies (yen, euro, INR). U.S. equities: headwind for energy-intensive sectors and transport, but bullish for oil & gas producers and defense stocks; Treasury market may see safe-haven demand on war-extension risk.
