
Every fire exit the Gulf built to survive a Hormuz closure is being burned by the country that closed Hormuz. The Habshan-Fujairah pipeline was constructed in 2012 for exactly this scenario. A 380-kilometre bypass carrying 1.5 to 1.8 million barrels per day of Abu Dhabi crude directly to the Gulf of Oman, avoiding the Strait of Hormuz entirely. It was the insurance policy. The infrastructure that guaranteed the UAE could export oil even if Iran shut down the strait. Satellite imagery confirmed today shows fires at two pumping stations along that pipeline. Iran hit the insurance policy. This is not an isolated strike. It is a systematic campaign. On March 3, drone debris set fire to the Fujairah Oil Terminal, the pipeline’s destination, where 70 million barrels of storage sits across 15 tank farms. On March 14 and 16, successive drone strikes hit the Fujairah zone again, suspending loading operations. Iran struck Dubai International Airport’s fuel tank, shutting down the busiest airport in the Middle East. Iran struck the Shah gas field. Iran struck Oman’s Salalah port. Iran struck a Kuwait desalination plant. Iran hit Ras Laffan, the heart of Qatar’s LNG. Every facility the Gulf spent decades building to reduce Hormuz dependence has been struck within thirty days of the strait closing. The only remaining major bypass is Saudi Arabia’s East-West pipeline to Yanbu on the Red Sea, 1,200 kilometres of exposed desert with multiple vulnerable pump stations. The Houthis, who entered the war on March 28, have explicitly warned that closing Bab al-Mandeb is “among our options.” If the Red Sea exit closes, the last bypass dies. The Gulf’s entire alternative infrastructure, built over forty years and hundreds of billions of dollars, would be neutralised by a combination of Iranian drones costing less than a Toyota and Houthi missiles fired from the poorest country in the Arab world. Iran’s strategy is not to win the air war. It cannot. Seventy percent of its launchers are degraded. Its navy is destroyed. But none of that matters if Tehran can demonstrate that every molecule of Gulf oil, whether it flows through Hormuz or around it, passes within range of Iranian or proxy weapons. The message is actuarial, not military. Every alternative route that the insurance market might deem safe has been struck at least once. Every risk model has been updated with a confirmed incident. The fire exit has been set on fire. The insurance premium for the bypass is now the same as the premium for the front door. The Gulf states did everything right. They diversified. They built pipelines. They invested in alternative ports. They prepared for the Hormuz scenario for forty years. And in thirty days, Iran demonstrated that preparing for the scenario and surviving it are not the same thing, because the preparation assumed the adversary would not think to burn the fire exits. The adversary thought of it. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…



















