Binance Square
#strait

strait

閲覧回数 294
6人が討論中
MrGoldsatoshi
·
--
🛑 イラン-アメリカの緊張: 封鎖と暗号市場の状況。 イラン-アメリカの緊張: 海上封鎖と暗号市場への影響 今日の最大のニュースは西アジアから来ており、アメリカとイランの間の緊張が臨界的な転換点に達しました。 #President ドナルド・トランプはイランの港に対して海上封鎖を発表し、ホルムズ海峡の#Strait で非常に不安定な状況を引き起こしています。 🚩 主要なハイライト: 海上封鎖: アメリカはイランの港を完全に封鎖しました。 #Trump は、いかなる#Iranian 船舶がアメリカの船に接近すれば、それは破壊されると述べています。 平和交渉への期待: パキスタンのイスラマバードでの交渉が失敗した後、2回目の交渉が試みられています。 副大統領J.D. ヴァンスは、いくつかの「進展」があったと述べましたが、イランは依然として厳しい条件に直面しています。 石油価格: 封鎖にもかかわらず、現在の石油価格は1バレルあたり100ドル未満に留まっており、市場は外交的解決への希望を持っています。 📉 #CryptoMarketRebounds 「リスクオンの反発」 地政学的緊張にもかかわらず、暗号市場は今日驚くべき回復を示しました。 投資家たちはこの反発を成功した「平和交渉」への新たな期待に結び付けています。 市場分析: 回復: 昨日70,000ドルを下回る危機に瀕していたビットコインは、今日74,500ドルの水準に達しました。 クジラの活動: データは、大規模な投資家(「クジラ」)が積極的に下落を買っていることを示しています。 リスク要因: アナリストは、イラン-アメリカの合意が失敗した場合、ビットコインは50,000ドルから65,000ドルのゾーンに後退する可能性があると考えています。しかし、解決が達成されれば、100,000ドルへの道は明確に見えます。 注意: 地政学的不安定性のため、市場は非常に不安定な状態にあります。 重要な投資を行う前には必ず自分自身で調査を行ってください $BTC $ETH $BNB #cryptonews
🛑 イラン-アメリカの緊張: 封鎖と暗号市場の状況。
イラン-アメリカの緊張: 海上封鎖と暗号市場への影響
今日の最大のニュースは西アジアから来ており、アメリカとイランの間の緊張が臨界的な転換点に達しました。 #President ドナルド・トランプはイランの港に対して海上封鎖を発表し、ホルムズ海峡の#Strait で非常に不安定な状況を引き起こしています。

🚩 主要なハイライト:
海上封鎖: アメリカはイランの港を完全に封鎖しました。 #Trump は、いかなる#Iranian 船舶がアメリカの船に接近すれば、それは破壊されると述べています。
平和交渉への期待: パキスタンのイスラマバードでの交渉が失敗した後、2回目の交渉が試みられています。 副大統領J.D. ヴァンスは、いくつかの「進展」があったと述べましたが、イランは依然として厳しい条件に直面しています。

石油価格:
封鎖にもかかわらず、現在の石油価格は1バレルあたり100ドル未満に留まっており、市場は外交的解決への希望を持っています。

📉 #CryptoMarketRebounds
「リスクオンの反発」
地政学的緊張にもかかわらず、暗号市場は今日驚くべき回復を示しました。 投資家たちはこの反発を成功した「平和交渉」への新たな期待に結び付けています。
市場分析:

回復:
昨日70,000ドルを下回る危機に瀕していたビットコインは、今日74,500ドルの水準に達しました。
クジラの活動: データは、大規模な投資家(「クジラ」)が積極的に下落を買っていることを示しています。

リスク要因:
アナリストは、イラン-アメリカの合意が失敗した場合、ビットコインは50,000ドルから65,000ドルのゾーンに後退する可能性があると考えています。しかし、解決が達成されれば、100,000ドルへの道は明確に見えます。

注意:
地政学的不安定性のため、市場は非常に不安定な状態にあります。 重要な投資を行う前には必ず自分自身で調査を行ってください
$BTC $ETH $BNB

#cryptonews
#Crisis は#Strait の#Hormuz が全球の肥料供給を脅かしています 🔀 ホルムズ海峡の閉鎖に伴い、世界の肥料供給チェーンは33%縮小すると見込まれており、停止した出荷は食料安全保障に悪影響を及ぼしています 📊 世界の尿素供給の約46%が湾岸地域から直接調達されており、現在の状況をさらに深刻化させています。#news #update $SOL $LUNC $PEPE
#Crisis #Strait #Hormuz が全球の肥料供給を脅かしています

🔀 ホルムズ海峡の閉鎖に伴い、世界の肥料供給チェーンは33%縮小すると見込まれており、停止した出荷は食料安全保障に悪影響を及ぼしています

📊 世界の尿素供給の約46%が湾岸地域から直接調達されており、現在の状況をさらに深刻化させています。#news #update $SOL $LUNC $PEPE
翻訳参照
🚨 #STRAIT OF #HORMUZ CLOSED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE
🚨 #STRAIT OF #HORMUZ CLOSED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE
記事
翻訳参照
The Strait of Hormuz: A Tiny Bottleneck That Holds the World HostageOne narrow waterway. 21 miles wide at its smallest point. And yet, somehow, this little strip of sea between Iran and Oman has become the single most dangerous place on Earth right now. Let me break it down for you. What Actually Is the Strait of Hormuz? Picture this: on one side, Iran's southern coast. On the other, the Musandam Peninsula of Oman. In between, a passage so narrow you could technically swim across it if you were insane enough (don't try it) . This isn't just any waterway. About one-fifth of the entire world's oil — roughly 20 million barrels every single day — squeezes through this bottleneck. Add to that a huge chunk of global liquefied natural gas (LNG) and about one-third of the world's fertilizer shipments . So yeah. When someone threatens to block it, the entire global economy holds its breath. What's Happening Right Now? Here's where it gets messy. On February 28, 2026, the US and Israel launched military strikes against Iran. The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively shut down since then . But wait — it gets more complicated. On April 12, President Trump announced the US Navy would begin blockading the strait. His exact words? "Any Iranian who fires at us, or at peaceful vessels, will be BLOWN TO HELL!" . The stated goal: prevent Iran from controlling the waterway and force them back to the negotiating table over their nuclear program . The Problem With Blockading a Bottleneck Here's what nobody seems to talk about enough. The Strait of Hormuz is 21 nautical miles wide at its narrowest. That's not a lot of room to maneuver warships. The Iranian coastline overlooking the strait has natural caves where small forces can hide and fire missiles. The mountainous terrain gives them elevated positions to watch every single ship that passes . Iran has spent decades preparing for exactly this scenario. They can't match the US Navy ship-for-ship, so they built an asymmetric arsenal instead : · Anti-ship cruise missiles · Naval mines (some of them mobile/drifting) · Shahed drones that fly low over water (hard to detect) · Fast attack boats · Unmanned surface and underwater vessels One Iranian military advisor recently threatened they could "sink US ships" operating in the waterway . The Legal Mess Nobody's Talking About Here's something interesting. Under international law — specifically the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea — the Strait of Hormuz is considered an "international strait" where ships have the right of "transit passage." That means Iran technically can't just block it or charge tolls . But here's the catch: Iran never signed that treaty. Neither did the US, actually. Iran claims the strait falls under its territorial waters and insists on the "innocent passage" standard from the older 1958 Geneva Convention. Under their interpretation, they can regulate who passes through and even charge fees . In March, Iran reportedly tried to impose transit fees of up to $2 million on certain vessels. Shipping experts called it "global extortion" . Who's Still Moving Ships? Despite the blockade and the war, some ships are still getting through. Data shows tankers from China, India, Malaysia, Vietnam, Pakistan, and Thailand have all transited the strait since the conflict began . China, notably, has multiple very large crude carriers (VLCCs) passing through. One Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said three Chinese ships recently sailed through "after coordination with relevant parties" — without specifying what that coordination actually involved . India and France just had a phone call where their leaders agreed on the "urgent need" to restore safe navigation . Meanwhile, CENTCOM claims they've turned back 10 vessels in the first 48 hours of the blockade. But maritime tracking data shows at least seven Iran-linked vessels still made it through. So someone's numbers don't add up . What Happens If This Gets Worse? Let me paint you a picture. If the strait stays closed or even partially blocked for an extended period, here's what happens : 1. Oil prices spike — not just because supply is disrupted, but because uncertainty alone drives prices up 2. Shipping insurance skyrockets — making it too expensive for many operators to even try 3. Food prices jump — because fertilizer shipments pass through here too 4. Manufacturing slows — energy costs hit every part of the supply chain 5. Your electronics get more expensive — yes, even semiconductor production depends on stable energy prices The effects ripple outward. Europe, already sensitive to energy prices, gets hit hard. China, as the world's largest importer of Gulf energy, sees this as a direct threat to its economic security . The Deeper Question Nobody's Answering Here's what keeps me up at night about all of this. The US is trying to control a waterway that the entire global economy depends on. But can any single country realistically guarantee the stability of a system this interconnected? The answer is probably no. Every tanker that gets turned back, every mine that gets laid, every warship that moves into position — it all adds to the risk. And at some point, the risk becomes so high that the global economy starts breaking in ways we can't easily predict. Where Do We Go From Here? There's a ceasefire right now. Talks happened in Pakistan. They failed . Israel's Prime Minister Netanyahu says the goals are clear: remove enriched material from Iran, eliminate their enrichment capability, and reopen the strait . Iran's parliamentary speaker says they put forward "constructive initiatives" but the US didn't earn their trust . Meanwhile, Russia's Putin has offered to mediate. The EU says diplomacy is "essential." Everyone talks, nobody agrees, and the strait stays blocked . My Take The Strait of Hormuz isn't just a military problem. It's not just an economic problem. It's a global governance problem. We built a world economy that depends on a 21-mile-wide passage between two hostile nations. And now we're discovering that nobody actually has a good answer for what happens when that passage gets blocked. The US can send all the warships it wants. Iran can threaten to sink them. But neither side can actually "win" here — because the real loser, every single time, is the global system that keeps food on our tables and fuel in our cars. Until someone figures out how to truly internationalize this waterway — with enforceable rules that everyone actually follows — the Strait of Hormuz will remain exactly what it is right now: A tiny bottleneck with the power to bring the world to its knees. And that should scare all of us. #Iran #strait #Hormuz $BTC $ETH

The Strait of Hormuz: A Tiny Bottleneck That Holds the World Hostage

One narrow waterway. 21 miles wide at its smallest point. And yet, somehow, this little strip of sea between Iran and Oman has become the single most dangerous place on Earth right now.
Let me break it down for you.
What Actually Is the Strait of Hormuz?
Picture this: on one side, Iran's southern coast. On the other, the Musandam Peninsula of Oman. In between, a passage so narrow you could technically swim across it if you were insane enough (don't try it) .
This isn't just any waterway. About one-fifth of the entire world's oil — roughly 20 million barrels every single day — squeezes through this bottleneck. Add to that a huge chunk of global liquefied natural gas (LNG) and about one-third of the world's fertilizer shipments .
So yeah. When someone threatens to block it, the entire global economy holds its breath.
What's Happening Right Now?
Here's where it gets messy.
On February 28, 2026, the US and Israel launched military strikes against Iran. The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively shut down since then .
But wait — it gets more complicated.
On April 12, President Trump announced the US Navy would begin blockading the strait. His exact words? "Any Iranian who fires at us, or at peaceful vessels, will be BLOWN TO HELL!" .
The stated goal: prevent Iran from controlling the waterway and force them back to the negotiating table over their nuclear program .
The Problem With Blockading a Bottleneck
Here's what nobody seems to talk about enough.
The Strait of Hormuz is 21 nautical miles wide at its narrowest. That's not a lot of room to maneuver warships. The Iranian coastline overlooking the strait has natural caves where small forces can hide and fire missiles. The mountainous terrain gives them elevated positions to watch every single ship that passes .
Iran has spent decades preparing for exactly this scenario. They can't match the US Navy ship-for-ship, so they built an asymmetric arsenal instead :
· Anti-ship cruise missiles
· Naval mines (some of them mobile/drifting)
· Shahed drones that fly low over water (hard to detect)
· Fast attack boats
· Unmanned surface and underwater vessels
One Iranian military advisor recently threatened they could "sink US ships" operating in the waterway .
The Legal Mess Nobody's Talking About
Here's something interesting. Under international law — specifically the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea — the Strait of Hormuz is considered an "international strait" where ships have the right of "transit passage." That means Iran technically can't just block it or charge tolls .
But here's the catch: Iran never signed that treaty. Neither did the US, actually.
Iran claims the strait falls under its territorial waters and insists on the "innocent passage" standard from the older 1958 Geneva Convention. Under their interpretation, they can regulate who passes through and even charge fees .
In March, Iran reportedly tried to impose transit fees of up to $2 million on certain vessels. Shipping experts called it "global extortion" .
Who's Still Moving Ships?
Despite the blockade and the war, some ships are still getting through.
Data shows tankers from China, India, Malaysia, Vietnam, Pakistan, and Thailand have all transited the strait since the conflict began .
China, notably, has multiple very large crude carriers (VLCCs) passing through. One Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said three Chinese ships recently sailed through "after coordination with relevant parties" — without specifying what that coordination actually involved .
India and France just had a phone call where their leaders agreed on the "urgent need" to restore safe navigation .
Meanwhile, CENTCOM claims they've turned back 10 vessels in the first 48 hours of the blockade. But maritime tracking data shows at least seven Iran-linked vessels still made it through. So someone's numbers don't add up .
What Happens If This Gets Worse?
Let me paint you a picture.
If the strait stays closed or even partially blocked for an extended period, here's what happens :
1. Oil prices spike — not just because supply is disrupted, but because uncertainty alone drives prices up
2. Shipping insurance skyrockets — making it too expensive for many operators to even try
3. Food prices jump — because fertilizer shipments pass through here too
4. Manufacturing slows — energy costs hit every part of the supply chain
5. Your electronics get more expensive — yes, even semiconductor production depends on stable energy prices
The effects ripple outward. Europe, already sensitive to energy prices, gets hit hard. China, as the world's largest importer of Gulf energy, sees this as a direct threat to its economic security .
The Deeper Question Nobody's Answering
Here's what keeps me up at night about all of this.
The US is trying to control a waterway that the entire global economy depends on. But can any single country realistically guarantee the stability of a system this interconnected?
The answer is probably no.
Every tanker that gets turned back, every mine that gets laid, every warship that moves into position — it all adds to the risk. And at some point, the risk becomes so high that the global economy starts breaking in ways we can't easily predict.
Where Do We Go From Here?
There's a ceasefire right now. Talks happened in Pakistan. They failed .
Israel's Prime Minister Netanyahu says the goals are clear: remove enriched material from Iran, eliminate their enrichment capability, and reopen the strait .
Iran's parliamentary speaker says they put forward "constructive initiatives" but the US didn't earn their trust .
Meanwhile, Russia's Putin has offered to mediate. The EU says diplomacy is "essential." Everyone talks, nobody agrees, and the strait stays blocked .
My Take
The Strait of Hormuz isn't just a military problem. It's not just an economic problem. It's a global governance problem.
We built a world economy that depends on a 21-mile-wide passage between two hostile nations. And now we're discovering that nobody actually has a good answer for what happens when that passage gets blocked.
The US can send all the warships it wants. Iran can threaten to sink them. But neither side can actually "win" here — because the real loser, every single time, is the global system that keeps food on our tables and fuel in our cars.
Until someone figures out how to truly internationalize this waterway — with enforceable rules that everyone actually follows — the Strait of Hormuz will remain exactly what it is right now:
A tiny bottleneck with the power to bring the world to its knees.
And that should scare all of us.
#Iran #strait #Hormuz $BTC $ETH
#Trump 再び脅威を発する 「たくさんの爆弾が爆発し始める」 世界はこの状況に満足していない 一時的な休戦は2026年4月22日水曜日の夜、ワシントン時間で期限を迎える。 そしてトランプ大統領は自分の立場をはっきりと示した。 「締切が過ぎても取引がなければ、たくさんの爆弾が爆発し始める」と彼は言っている。 これは交渉の言葉ではない。 これは警告だ。 休戦は常に短期間のものであった。ひと時の停止だ。 紛争の終息ではない。 その一時停止が今まさに終わろうとしている。 トランプは世界に警告を発している。 水曜日の夜までに取引が成立しなければ、#military 行動が再開される。 市場はこれを注意深く見守っている。 いかなるエスカレーションも#oil 価格を再び急上昇させる可能性がある。 #Hormuz の#Strait はまだ脆弱だ。世界のサプライチェーンはまだ回復中だ。 時計は刻々と進んでいる。水曜日の夜が分かれ道だ。そしてトランプがその線を引いた。 $RAVE $ARIA $MSTR 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨
#Trump 再び脅威を発する 「たくさんの爆弾が爆発し始める」
世界はこの状況に満足していない
一時的な休戦は2026年4月22日水曜日の夜、ワシントン時間で期限を迎える。
そしてトランプ大統領は自分の立場をはっきりと示した。
「締切が過ぎても取引がなければ、たくさんの爆弾が爆発し始める」と彼は言っている。
これは交渉の言葉ではない。
これは警告だ。
休戦は常に短期間のものであった。ひと時の停止だ。
紛争の終息ではない。
その一時停止が今まさに終わろうとしている。
トランプは世界に警告を発している。
水曜日の夜までに取引が成立しなければ、#military 行動が再開される。
市場はこれを注意深く見守っている。
いかなるエスカレーションも#oil 価格を再び急上昇させる可能性がある。
#Hormuz #Strait はまだ脆弱だ。世界のサプライチェーンはまだ回復中だ。
時計は刻々と進んでいる。水曜日の夜が分かれ道だ。そしてトランプがその線を引いた。
$RAVE $ARIA $MSTR 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨
さらにコンテンツを探すには、ログインしてください
Binance Squareで世界の暗号資産トレーダーの仲間入り
⚡️ 暗号資産に関する最新かつ有益な情報が見つかります。
💬 世界最大の暗号資産取引所から信頼されています。
👍 認証を受けたクリエイターから、有益なインサイトを得られます。
メール / 電話番号