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Mideast

Hormuz Traffic Collapses More Than 95 Percent as Trump Extends Energy Strike Deadline; Strikes Hit Power Plants Across Iran

The International Energy Agency (IEA) assessed the disruption as the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market

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Defcon Level and Donald Standeford
Mar 24, 2026
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MIDDLE EAST — Iran’s selective enforcement blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has reduced transit traffic by more than 95 percent, trapping more than 130 container ships inside the Persian Gulf and stranding approximately 40,000 sailors, according to vessel tracking data compiled by maritime intelligence firms.

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The International Energy Agency (IEA) assessed the disruption as the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market, with Persian Gulf production flows collapsing from roughly 20 million barrels per day to a fraction of prewar volume.

President Trump extended his 48-hour deadline to strike Iranian power plants by five days on March 23, stating that the United States and Iran had engaged in “productive” conversations covering 15 points of agreement. Iranian officials denied any negotiations had taken place, with IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) and parliamentary leaders calling the claims “fake news” and characterizing them as fabrications.

A senior Iranian official separately acknowledged indirect message exchanges through intermediaries, with Pakistan emerging as a potential go-between for in-person talks.

On March 24, U.S. and Israeli forces struck the Isfahan and Khorramshahr power plants in Iran, with combined generation capacity exceeding 3,600 megawatts. Iranian forces responded with at least eight separate missile launches at Israel, striking four sites including central Tel Aviv and injuring at least six people.

Gulf states continued absorbing Iranian strikes, with Kuwait having intercepted 97 ballistic missiles and 283 drones since operations began on February 28.

Assessment: The five-day extension of the energy strike deadline creates a defined window closing approximately March 28. Whether the extension reflects genuine diplomatic progress through intermediaries or a pause for force repositioning remains unverified by any named official on either side.

The more than 95 percent reduction in Hormuz traffic, which the IEA characterized as the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market, indicates that economic pressure on energy-importing nations will intensify regardless of the military trajectory. Japan imports 90 percent of its crude from the Middle East; South Korea sources 70 percent from the region.

Hormuz Blockade: Selective Enforcement, Not Total Closure

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Donald Standeford
Founder of The Standeford Journal. I'm an American independent investigative journalist, intel/geopolitical analyst, and world traveler.
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